Liberia’s Devastating Political Earthquake of August 15, 2022

Rufus S. Berry II, MBA

Liberia’s Devastating Political Earthquake of August 15, 2022

 

I lived in Northern California for over 30 years, served as president of the Liberian community and experienced numerous earthquakes, including the devastating 1989 San Francisco Loma Prieta earthquake. 

For the record, an earthquake is the shaking of the surface of the Earth resulting from a sudden release of energy in the Earth's lithosphere that creates a seismic wave.

On August 15, , a devastating political earthquake occurred in Liberia, when the mother country of our republic — the government of the United States, through the Treasury Department, sanctioned three senior and extremely powerful Liberian government officials, including President George Weah’s Chief of Staff, for what it says is their ‘ongoing involvement in public corruption.’

This is a national disgrace! For the first time in our nation’s history, a foreign government has imposed sanctions on the President of the Republic of Liberia’s Chief of Staff, Nathaniel McGill, Liberia’s Chief Prosecutor Sayma Syrenius Cephus, and Liberia’s Chief Gateway Manager, Bill “Gbekugbeh Jr.” Twehway, the Managing Director of the National Port Authority. 

Taking into account the US far reaching global influence and the historical link between the United States and Liberia, it would be extremely difficult for these three officials to maintain their respective positions.

The vast majority of the Liberian people, including myself, are in total agreement with the decision of the American government. However, I would have hoped that the US would have also gone after members of the Ellen Johnson Sirleaf administration — including her son Robert Sirleaf — who enriched themselves at the expense of the Liberian people. 

The Liberian people are still being victimized by the terrible legacy of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, when she institutionalized corruption (bribery) at the National Legislature and in the general public consciousness. Bribing lawmakers to confirm her nominees, pass bills, and to ratify concession agreements was the acceptable norm during her administration.

I hold the Weah government responsible for not proactively calling on the experts - the financial experts - to investigate and go after those extremely corrupt officials of the Ellen Johnson Sirleaf government. I certainly would have volunteered my professional services to my country in the battle against corruption.

The sanctions block the three senior government officials from accessing the U.S. financial system, freeze any of their U.S. assets, and bar Americans worldwide from dealing with them.

“Through their corruption these officials have undermined democracy in Liberia for their own personal benefit,” Brian Nelson, Treasury's Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, said in a statement.

The designations “demonstrate that the United States remains committed to holding corrupt actors accountable and to the continued support of the Liberian people,” he said.

These targeted sanctions, like those authorized under the Global Magnitsky Act and similar programs, can hold accountable the world’s worst human rights abusers and corrupt actors.

On April 8, President Biden signed into law, the permanent reauthorization of the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act. 

First enacted in 2016, the Global Magnitsky Act spurred the U.S. government for the first time to create a targeted sanctions program to help hold accountable hundreds of human rights abusers and corrupt actors around the world. 

The landmark law sparked global momentum to adopt similar targeted sanctions programs in Canada, the U.K., the E.U., and Australia.

The Liberian people will support the President in whatever decision he makes in this extremely serious matter. However, others are saying that it is important for the President to ask for the resignation of those officials or fire them outright to retain a modicum of respectability. Perhaps, they’re awaiting the final outcome of President Weah’s actions, not just the cosmetic suspension he has issued.

May God bless us, strengthen, encourage and uplift us as a body and as a nation this day and in the days ahead.

The author, Rufus Berry II, is an apolitical and anti-corruption activist