Africa's first elected female head of state Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf was sworn in Monday as war-battered Liberia's new
president, promising a "fundamental break" with the West African
nation's violent past and pledging to rebuild.
With US Navy warships offshore for the first time since the
civil war's end two years ago, and first lady Laura Bush and
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on hand in a show of support,
the moment was met with thunderous applause from thousands of
guests.
"We know that your vote was a vote for change, a vote for peace,
security ... and we have heard you loudly," the 67-year-old Sirleaf
said in her inaugural speech. "We recognize this change is not a
change for change's sake, but a fundamental break with the
past."
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan sent congratulations, saying
Sirleaf had a "historic mandate to lead the nation toward a future
of lasting peace and stability."
Founded by freed American slaves in 1847, Liberia was prosperous
and peaceful for more than a century, bolstered by abundant timber
and diamond wealth. But back-to-back civil wars from 1989 to 2003
brought the country to its knees, killing 200,000 people and
displacing half the nation's population of 3 million.
It is now one of the world's poorest countries, ranked 206th in
terms of per capita income out of 208 countries on 2004 World Bank
list.
Today, not even the capital has running water or electricity:
the rich rely on generators, the poor on candles. Unemployment is
80 percent. "We have all suffered. The individual sense of
deprivation is immense," Sirleaf said.
She acknowledged the task of rebuilding would be coupled with
high expectations, but called for patience.
"The task of reconstructing our devastating economy is awesome,"
she said. "There will be no quick fix, yet we have the potential to
promote a healthy economy in which Liberians and international
investors can prosper."
Ensuring Liberia remains peaceful, though, will be Sirleaf's
most pressing — and perhaps most difficult — task.
George Weah, the soccer star who lost the November runoff, was
backed by most of the country's top warlords and faction leaders.
He grudgingly accepted defeat and attended the inauguration.
Several lawmakers in the new legislature, including the House
speaker, are under a UN travel ban and assets freeze for
constituting "a threat to peace." One newly appointed senator
ordered his troops to hack off the ears of a captured president in
1990. Others are allies of one-time warlord and president Charles
Taylor, who was forced from power in 2003 as rebels shelled the
capital.
Another crucial task: assuring the future of 100,000
ex-combatants who laid down arms last year. Many of them are
prowling the streets, unemployed.
For now, Sirleaf's government is backed by 15,000 UN troops. A
similar UN force pulled out of neighboring Sierra Leone in the
final days of 2005, completing a successful, five-year mission that
restored the peace.
Many see Taylor as one of the biggest threats. Exiled to
Nigeria, he has been accused by some UN officials of trying to
meddle in Liberian affairs, mostly by telephone.
Taylor is wanted by a UN-backed war crimes court in Sierra Leone
for his role in fueling that country's civil war, but Nigeria has
refused to hand him over.
In an interview with NBC's Today show broadcast Monday,
Sirleaf suggested she would like to see Taylor put on trial.
"Mr. Taylor has always said he wanted his day in court to defend
himself. We should grant him that privilege," she said.
Rice said she was confident Taylor would be handed over to the
Sierra Leone court eventually. He "is through raping and pillaging
this country, and the Liberian people are trying to look forward,"
Rice told reporters on a flight to Monrovia.
In her address, Sirleaf promised to stamp out corruption — a key
step to win over skeptical foreign donors.
She also called on Liberians abroad and refugees in West Africa
to return and rebuild. The UN says nearly 400,000 Liberians are
displaced, both inside the country and the region.
Born in Liberia in 1938, Sirleaf worked her way through college
in the United States by mopping floors and waiting tables. She
graduated with a master's degree in public administration from
Harvard in 1971 and took top jobs in Liberia, including finance
minister, and senior positions at Citibank, the World Bank and the
UN.
Twice imprisoned in Liberia in the 1980s for political reasons,
she returned during a break in fighting in 1997 to run for
president. She lost to Taylor, but tried again last fall, emerging
victorious.
On Monday, standing in front of the Liberian flag with her left
hand on a Bible, Sirleaf took the oath of office in a ceremony
attended by thousands of Liberians and scores of foreign
dignitaries, including Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo and
South Africa's Thabo Mbeki.
Armed UN peacekeepers surveyed the scene from atop surrounding
buildings with binoculars.
"It is time for us, regardless of our political affiliations or
persuasions, to come together to heal and rebuild our nation," she
said.
(Chinadaily.com via agencies January 17, 2006)