The October/December 1998 Issue Of The Perspective
Where Is Our Moral Outrage?
As 1998 rapidly ebbs into the annals of human events and a
new year dawns on the horizon, Liberians everywhere have hoped
that their country would have made substantial progress toward
mending the rift of war and bridging the national division.
An Eyewitness Account Of The September
18 Massacre
The event that climaxed the Camp Johnson Road incident started
with the usual government accusations of people wanting to destabilize
the country and overthrow the government. These accusations lingered
until Roosevelt Johnson went to the United States for medical
treatment several months ago. When Johnson returned home surreptitiously,
Taylor's fear heightened and his comfort level dropped disastrously
low.
Issues In Perspective:The Trap Of
Ethnicity -The Case Of Grand Gedeh And Nimba Counties
The strategy of ethnicity in Africa is nothing new to modern
African political scene. The British invented the strategy, as
we know it today. You may recall it was referred to as "The
Divide and Rule" strategy. It was implemented during the
colonial and post-colonial eras. Even today, Nigeria and other
former colonized countries are suffering from its effects.
A Call For New Alternative
For many years, I have used this space to lash out at those
who plunged Liberia into its current quagmire. I have said that
such lowlifes who engineered and oversaw the death of thousands
of Liberians should not be allowed to govern the country.
A Look At Relations With Neighboring
States And The U.S.
In his inaugural address Taylor promised, among other things,
to maintain good neighbourliness, but recent events prove that
he is the major source of insecurity in the region. The effective
pursuit of Liberian foreign policy which is reflective of the
country's post-war realities is hamstrung by the lack of properly
trained and an experienced foreign minister.
Decentralization: A Question
Of Democracy And Governance
If one were taking stock of some of the significant events
and developments which occurred in 1998, several occasions can
be cited. Topping the list would be the Dokie murder trial in
which there was a miscarriage of justice; the September massacre
of over 300 unarmed Liberians on Camp Johnson Road by government
security forces and the subsequent shoot-out at the American Embassy
in Monrovia, in government's hot pursuit of enemies.
Liberia: ECOWAS Dilemma
The recent 21st ECOWAS Summit should have dealt with entirely
new issues if the Liberian peace process had produced responsible
actors attuned to the necessity of reconciling their people and
the imperative for sub-regional harmony. Instead, after eight
years of ECOMOG involvement in search for peace in Liberia and
the sacrifice of some of the best sons and daughters of the sub-region,
the Summit dealt with the simmering bloody cauldron in that pitiful
country.
Grand Kru Senator Refuses To Answer Political
Questions
The Liberian Community Association of Metropolitan Atlanta
(LAMA) had a taste of what transpires in the present day Liberian
senate at the community monthly meeting on October 11 through
the presence of Hon. Beatrice Nimely, senator from Grand Kru County.
Holding Political Chameleons Accountable
Much has been written about the principal players in the seven-year
national holocaust in Liberia. Primarily, the principal players
claimed they launched their various rebellions in order to right
what were wrong in the Liberian society.