Warring Parties Failed To Select Transitional Leaders
By Moses M. Zangar, Jr.
Accra. Ghana
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
August 20, 2003
Despite several hours of brainstorming over who heads Liberia’s transitional administration, contenders in the Liberian armed conflict on Monday failed to select the chairman and vice chairman of the National Transitional Government. Consequently, many Liberians, mostly refugees who had thronged the M-Plaza Hotel in anticipation of celebrating the new leadership, went home with disappointment and frowned faces.
The selection of a transitional arrangement is expected to culminate into
the end of nearly three months of negotiations among Liberian stakeholders
in Ghana as well as quelling decades of tribal feuds and the whirlwind of
carnage and bloodletting in the country.
Already, representatives of the 18 political parties and civil society organizations
have jointly nominated three names each for the positions of Chairman and
Vice Chairman respectively. Unity Party’s Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, Gyude
Bryant of the Liberia Action Party and Cllr. Rudolph Sherman of the True Whig
Party have been nominated by the political parties and civil society organizations
for the chairmanship of the interim government. Wesley Momo Johnson of the
United People’s Party, J. Hoodo Marriam of the National Democratic Party
of Liberia and Free Democratic Party’s Saah Ciapha Gbollie are nominees
for the position of vice chairman.
According to the comprehensive peace deal for Liberia, parties to the June
17 cease-fire agreement, the Government, LURD and MODEL should have, after
due consideration and by consensus, selected one person each out of the two
categories of nominees who should have been declared chairman and vice chairman
of the transitional administration.
But the long hours of meeting among the belligerents on Monday did not produce
the much-needed results. Instead, they have, according to sources, asked for
“time” to deliberate on the nominees and make their selection
for both offices.
Accordingly, the warring parties needed time to ex-ray the nominees and communicate
with their fighters on the field to accept whoever is selected for either
of the positions.
However, our sources said they were expected to have done their cross-examination
of nominees for the two categories Wednesday night. The results of successful
nominees for the positions are expected to be announced by the Mediator, Gen.
Abdulsalami Abubakar at 6AM on Thursday.
Political analysts here are of the view that the process is unpredictable
and that it is anybody’s guess as to who emerges as the chairman or
vice chairman.
At the same time, protests filed by two candidates for position of Chairman,
Alhaji G.V. Kromah of the All Liberian Coalition Party and former Vice President
Harry F. Moniba of the Liberia National Union have reportedly been thrashed
on grounds that they were not accredited delegates or observers.
Both men had wanted a re-run of the election, alleging that the election commission
denied them the right to vote because they were not registered delegates and
observers but at the same time allowed others in this category
to cast their ballots. The election commission has since denied the allegation,
citing Article 25 of the comprehensive peace agreement that gives only accredited
delegates and observers the right to vote.