Tolerance and Justice:
Let’s Experience Some Too
By: George-Daweh Yuoh
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
December 16, 2005
Tolerance and Patience
Particularly, after going through what we went through
over the past 20 years due in part to the extreme
intolerance exhibited by both Samuel Doe and Charles
Taylor, you would think that this time around we would
have learned well and be ready to practice what we
preached and what we longed for all these years. Patience
and tolerance are inseparable virtues of democracy.
To understand that the next person doesn't need to
think like you is to understand freedom of choice,
a very major component of participatory democracy.
Following the run-off and as soon as the CDC announced its claims of fraud and irregularities, people started calling Mr. Weah names for doing what none of our past "educated" opposition leaders ever did. And that is, seeking the peaceful and legal resolution of a perceived or alleged disenfranchisement. Should we not allow our institutions, including the courts to work freely and fairly for once? Doesn't our Constitution guarantee that Mr. Weah has the right to disagree with the NEC and even challenge the elections results as he deems fit? Perhaps, if previous opposition leaders had taken the same route Mr. Weah is pursuing now, we wouldn't have had any war in Liberia, and the over 250,000 lives lost in the process would have been saved.
Like many of my compatriots, I will not support anyone
who brings war on our people, and that is why I have
always maintained that all of those who sponsored
and supervised the destruction of Liberia are unfit
to govern Liberia. But it seems that, with the help
of the international community, we have now developed
the culture of rewarding warmongers and merchants
of death with political power. I hope we can gather
the political will and fortitude to break this trend.
For where is the disincentive to violence when we
all but espouse violence as the easier channel to
political power?
Weah’s Comments and the Backlash
But truth be told, Mr. Weah's comments about making
sure that inauguration would not be held until the
world addresses his concerns, were completely out
of order, since he has already file his case with
the NEC. The Supreme Court is also available should
he be dissatisfied with the ruling from the NEC, and
he can file injunctions and other petitions to buttress
his efforts. But making such a sweeping statement
that has the propensity to spark unnecessary retributions
can only play in the hands of his adversaries. In
my opinion, Mr. Weah should call a press conference
immediately, inviting particularly the international
press including the BBC, CNN and AP to clarify the
issue, and if necessary, apologize to the people of
Liberia for that statement, so as to calm their wary
nerves.
At the same time, I believe that the comments Mr. Weah made, pertaining to his claim that he was the one elected president is nothing new, and in fact that statement was consistent with his case before the NEC. If one feels cheated in a process and lost, then it is logical to conclude that he believes he was otherwise the winner of that process. My only concern about such comment is that it could jeopardize his case currently before the NEC. Nevertheless, and like Mr. Weah, I too say that it is a case that must be investigated and pursued to the very LEGAL end! If in the end the NEC and Supreme Court rule against Mr. Weah and the CDC, I will be one of the first to ask him to abide by the ruling of the courts, and which I am sure he will do. But until then, he has the right to scream that he was cheated, and so justice must be served accordingly!
Unprovoked Police Brutality and Justice
Having said that, I am bewildered that Liberians
are consistently in the habit of nurturing dictators
and tyrants, only to come back and start to scream
when the tyrannical apparatuses are unleashed on them.
When Samuel Doe started his killings, people justified
his actions until they became uncontrollable. Similarly,
there were those who supported and cheered on Charles
Taylor in his misadventures of chaos and tyranny.
Now, the national police have gone to a political
party’s headquarters to violently removed partisans
from the premises without any justifiable reasons,
nor without any court warrant to do so. And instead
of condemning the police’s action of unprovoked
and unwarranted brutality, people are cheering them
on and slamming the partisans of CDC with all types
of slurs.
Before the police move on to a private property to
touch a single pin, they must have a court’s
warrant to do so. Anything else is just plain jungle
justice. What Liberians need to be asking now is what
prompted such a reckless and violent reaction and
confrontation from the police, to the point where
lives were endangered and private properties belonging
to the CDC destroyed. Is this the kind of justice
we must expect in the new Liberia, where police can
do anything without questions being asked? Where is
justice?
While at this, it is necessary to call on the NEC
to adjudicate the CDC claims as judiciously and expeditiously
as they can. It is more than 30 days now since the
CDC launched its protests about the validity of the
results. It is in everyone’s interest that this
case be quickly resolved. I will not preempt what
that resolution will be, but I can only say that any
further delay could be suggestive of a miscarriage
of justice.
Peace in Liberia
Now therefore, it is not undemocratic for opposition
figures to call on supporters to rally against decisions
of the ruling government. If people were executed
each time this happened, then there would have been
no more democracy left in the world today. In the
civilize world we live in, and that which we wish
for our country, everyone does not jump on the bandwagon
of the ruling party. There are those who will remain
in the opposition, and those who fall in this latter
category are no lesser patriots either. We must be
tolerant of each other, or face the possibility of
chaos. For if a society closes all doors to others
who seek justice, society then open other doors for
confrontation.
Liberia is for all of us, and as much as we want peace so badly, some of us want lasting peace, and not just any cosmetic design. The hallmark of tranquility is when people understand and believe that when they have been wronged, there is a system that they can go to and get proper redress. Take this away, and you sow seeds of discord and chaos. We have struggled to come thus far, and loosing over 250,000 of our compatriots in the process. We will not go back to war, but most importantly, we must not and never allow what took us there in the first place to see the light of day in mother Liberia.
About the Author: George D. Yuoh is a Liberian, resident in the state of Minnesota. He can be reached at georgeyuoh@yahoo.com.