ULAA Board Opens Investigation into the Seating of Ranney Jackson on the NTLA
By Sam Stevquoah
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
December 4, 2003
December 3, 2003, Lowell, Massachusetts:-Members of the ULAA National
Board of Directors will, this Friday, December 5, kick off investigations
into the circumstances surrounding the seating of former ULAA Board
Chairman Ranney B. Jackson on the National Transitional Legislative
Assembly in the Republic of Liberia.
In a resolution adopted at the just-ended ULAA 29th Annual General Assembly
held in Lowell, Massachusetts on October 25, the delegates of the various
ULAA chapters expressed outrage and disappointment over the manner in
which the NTLA seat, allocated by the Ghana Peace Accord to Liberians
in the Diaspora through the Civil Society Organizations was occupied.
The resolution noted that the seat was occupied "without the knowledge
and participation of the Union." The delegates therefore overwhelmingly
voted to mandate the National Administration and the National Board
of Directors to conduct an investigation into how the seat was occupied
and make a report within 30 days.
Recent news reports from Monrovia carried in The Inquirer and
The News newspapers purportedly quoted Former Chairman Jackson,
have offered varying accounts of how he was selected to represent 'Liberians
in the Diaspora' and how the seat was allocated in Ghana.
At the Board Special Session held recently in Philadelphia, Board members
voted to set aside a special date on which the Assembly resolutions
will be exclusively discussion. The majority of Board members chose
Friday, December 5, as the best date for this discussion.
The Board deliberations on the Assembly resolutions is expected to be
lively and intense as the document contains quite a good number of interesting
challenges put forth to the Board by Massachusetts Assembly.
Other issues to be discussed include the issue of multiple chapters
of ULAA in a single State, the need for a uniform code of conduct for
the Union, and the role of the Union in member chapter elections.