Liberia celebrates 169 years of independence Tuesday. Some Liberians
say there is little to celebrate in the face of economic difficulties.
But Liberia’s ambassador to the United States, Jeremiah Sulunteh, said
while there are some challenges, the country has made remarkable
progress under President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.
“This year, we are
celebrating our independence with the theme: ‘Consolidating Progress
Toward Transformation’ of Liberia. As you know, the Agenda 2030 that has
been encouraged by our president is a long-range plan. And so every
progress we are making toward the transformation of Liberia needs to be
celebrated,” he said.
Ambassador Sulunteh said much progress has
been made in the government’s effort to rehabilitate some of Liberia’s
broken infrastructure as a result of civil war.
“The Mount Coffee
Hydroelectric project is coming alive, hopefully in December; we have
miles of roads that have been paved that were never touched during last
20-30 years. So, there’s a lot of progress being made, but at the same
time we still have challenges,” he said.
Sulunteh, who has been
Liberia’s ambassador in Washington for the last four years, said this
year’s Independence Day celebration will be his last. He said he hopes
to be part of the political process in 2017 when the country will be
electing a successor to President Johnson Sirleaf.
“Usually,
diplomats are posted for four years, but at the same time you serve at
the will and pleasure of the president. So are calculating and assuming
that we will be here for four years. This should be my last independence
celebration, and we look forward to serving the Liberian people in
another capacity,” he said.
Ambassador Sulunteh said some presidential candidates have been speaking with him for what he calls possible collaboration.
“The
truth of the matter is many of the presidential candidates are talking
not only to me. I know everyone is talking to someone. So people have
been asking us what role we might want to play in their own camp. But
the bigger picture is for Liberia,” Sulunteh said.
Marking the independence anniversary, there have been cultural
performances at the Liberian embassy as vendors from across the
Washington, DC, Maryland and Virginia area sold Liberian food, including
cassava leaves, fufu and soup, check rice with gravy, and a lot more.
Some
Liberians like former journalist Jerry Wion said Liberia has made very
little progress under President Johnson Sirleaf apart from the fact
there has been no war.
“We have nothing to celebrate. The army,
police, immigration, health care workers in President Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf’s hometown of Bomi, Tubmanburg, they have not been paid for
three months. The American dollar is now scarce in Liberia. The rate of
exchange is now 100 Liberian dollars to 1 US dollar. What is there to
celebrate?”
The U.S. and Liberian dollars are both legal tenders for Liberia.
Wion also said the government has neglected the country’s health care system.
“Yesterday,
the minister of state for Presidential Affairs, Edward McClain died in a
hospital in South Africa; the former associate justice to the Supreme
Court Emmanuel Wureh died in Ghana. Why are they not going to JFK [main
government hospital in Liberia] instead going to foreign countries?
Because the government has neglected the health care system in Liberia,”
Wion said.
Another Liberian, Lahai Swaray, vice chair of the
Patriot Movement – a group that wants to elect Vice President Joseph
Boakai to succeed President Johnson Sirleaf – said the vice president
will solve the country’s economic problems if elected in 2017.
“I’m
excited to be here to celebrate our country’s independence today.
Mostly importantly the reason for my being here is to mobilize our
Liberian youth and our Liberian public to tell them more about Honorable
Joseph Boakai. I will tell you that he has the solution to take us to
the next level economically,” Swaray said.
Monday, 25 July 2016
Liberia Celebrates 169 Years Of Independence
Posted by dddd on 11:58:00 in WORLD NEWS | Comments : 0
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