Liberians Denounce War, Want
Peaceful Means to Remove Taylor
August 14, 2000
The umbrella organization of Liberians living in the Diaspora, the Union of Liberian Associations in the Americas (ULAA), has denounced the ongoing war in the country, calling instead for peaceful means to replace President Charles who, the organization maintains, has failed to uphold democratic values, thus plunging the country in chaos and international disrepute. .
The organization, based in the United States, accused Taylor of numerous human violations, including the freedom of the press, the right of peace assembly, and free and impartial trials.
The Liberian organization also accused Taylor, a warlord turned president, of mismanaging the economy and creating the conditions for insecurity that have kept thousands of Liberians in refugee camps despite the July 1997 elections and promises of democratization.
"The fragile peace and tenuous security conditions in
Liberia are threatened by renewed fighting in Lofa County and
perhaps other parts of Liberia between the Liberian Government
forces and fighters of the Liberian United for Reconciliation
and Democracy (LURD). This latest military incursion which began
on July 7, 2000, follows other arm clashes in Lofa County during
April, 1999 and August 1999. LURD has given President Taylor 90
days to resign or be removed by full force. President Taylor has
declared a state of emergency in Lofa and dispatched contingents
of military and security personnel as well as conscripts to engage
in warfare against the LURD forces. Recently, President Taylor
informed the Liberian people of the number of people dead and
wounded as a result of this action", ULAA noted.
ULAA will meet on 26 August to mop out their policy regarding
the Taylor government and developments in the country.
Having elected a new leadership almost a year ago, and for the
first time a female president in its twenty-six - year history,
ULAA continues to be plagued by a credibility and image problem,
despite a change in leadership. While it served as a major voice
in the '70s, alongside other pro-democracy groups, championing
the need for justice, freedom of the press, and respect for human
rights, by the 80s, ULAA underwent a profound political change
and lost its primary focus and direction.
The change in focus and direction did not augur well for the Union.
The perception that ULAA not only abandon its core principles,
but was now being used as a launching pad for furthering the political
ambitions of those who led it was quite evident. Charles Taylor
and many of its former members now constitutes the current corrupt
crop of the Liberian political leadership. This has led to the
gradual erosion of its credibility among its Liberian constituency
here in the United States.
As the ULAA struggles to repair its image, despite what appears
to be good intentions and determined efforts on the part of its
current leadership, it seems confronted by a new wave of problems.
There is a growing internal squabble over policy direction. While
the administration under the leadership of Mydea Reeves-Karpeh
seems determined to breakaway from the baggage of the past, it
is being challenged by the Board, its legislative and policymaking
body. The Board of Directors, chaired by Augustus Major, is said
to be accommodating to the Taylor government. This has led to
a virtual stalemate which has hindered the administration from
pursuing its other important programs.
Mr. Major, who some Board members classified as "Chairman
for life" because he has been Chairman for several years,
has in the past undermined ULAA efforts. Among other pro-government
maneuverings, he was considered a Taylor's apologist and was publicly
confronted for undermining ULAA's February 6, 1998, Protest Rally
against the widespread and continual abuses of human rights and
civil liberties of the people of Liberia by the Liberian government.
ULAA insiders feel that Taylor's apologists within the Union are
determined to attend the August 26 meeting to water down any resolution
issued by the Union.
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