Catholic Bishop Wants Liberians to Stand Up For Principles
By: Patrick K. Wrokpoh
The Inquirer
Monrovia, Liberia
Distributed by
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
Posted December 9, 2003
Catholic Archbishop Michael K. Francis has urged Liberians to cultivate the
habit of taking the destiny of the country in their own hands. He said Liberians
should stand up for principles and speak out against vices that could plunge
the nation into chaos or to make it retrogress.
Bishop Francis was speaking on Friday when he addressed the closing ceremony
of a five-day round-table conference of Post Conflict Rebuilding of Liberia
- Opportunities, Challenges and Strategies for Peace, Disarmament, Demobilization,
Reintegration and Rehabilitation.
The conference which brought together representatives of various pro-democracy
and local NGOs, among others, was organized to come out with a plan of action
on the successful implementation of the ongoing DDRR program. It took place
at the Monrovia City Hall.
Addressing the participants among others, Bishop Francis who was also Chief
Convener of the conference, urged Liberians to be a strong people who should
at all times stand for principles.
He said Liberians should break the culture of silence and believe in what
they say and stand by what they say, stressing the need for them to take the
destiny of the country in their own hands.
He expressed the hope that the recommendations that came out of the conference,
would be useful to make the DDRR program successful.
For their part, the participants called for sensitization and awareness campaign
to be conducted in all the counties through a versatile platform.
Speaking when he read the recommendation for and on behalf of his fellow participants,
Mr. Dee Maxwell S. Kemoyah, Sr. who is also Executive Director of Action for
Greater Harvest (AGRHA), said civil society organizations and local NGOs including
participating groups that attended the conference should be an integral part
of the DDRR program.
They called for the establishment of a trust fund by the NTGL in collaboration
with UNMIL for a complementary support to the DDRR program. They said such
an allocation should be in the national budget of the country.
The participants also recommended that the culture values of Liberia be considered
in the process while the full scale deployment of UNMIL should be effectuated
throughout the country.
They also called for state building in the planning process of the DDRR program
and that a post conference bureau should be established for the effective
coordination and implementation of the conference’s recommendation.
The participants called for the implementation of all the DDRR programs by
local NGOs in collaboration with international organizations while at the
same time, they want the donor community, warring factions, the NTGL to demonstrate
practical political goodwill in the implementation of the peace agreement
and the DDRR program.
The participants said weapons collected should be destroyed and recycled for
the production of agriculture tools.
They called for a policy for peace framework for peace and social reconciliation
to be developed, and passed into law by the NTGL.