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/ 5 May 2006

Liberia won’t be paying Taylor’s legal fees

Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf said on Friday that Monrovia had no intention, nor is it required, to pay the legal fees of indicted war crimes suspect Charles Taylor. The former Liberian leader is standing trial at the United Nations-backed war crimes court in Sierra Leone on 11 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity for his role in the decade-long Sierra Leone conflict.

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/ 3 April 2006

Johnson-Sirleaf’s standing boosted by Taylor’s arrest

Just months after winning Liberia’s presidential election, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf has scored a masterstroke at the start of her mandate by ably negotiating the transfer of Charles Taylor to Freetown to stand trial, observers in the region said. After taking office in January, Johnson-Sirleaf initially decided not to involve herself in the problem posed by the former Liberian president.

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/ 31 March 2006

Last page of an ugly chapter

As word trickled through of the capture of former president Charles Taylor, huddles of Liberians began to congregate around the nearest radio. For the first time in years, the Champions League football was switched off in favour of the news. ”This is a great day,” said Jerome Verdier, head of the country’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

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/ 28 March 2006

Nigeria orders arrest of Taylor’s aides

Nigeria’s President Olusegun Obasanjo has ordered the arrest of aides to former Liberian president Charles Taylor, fuelling Tuesday’s rumours that Liberia’s former head, now living in exile in Nigeria, has escaped from his residence in the southern town of Calabar. Remi Oyo, spokesperson to Obasanjo, said that the Nigerian government had ordered the aides’ immediate arrest.

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/ 26 March 2006

Charles Taylor cleared for extradition

Charles Taylor, Liberia’s exiled former warlord and president wanted internationally on crimes against humanity charges, was set to return on Saturday after Nigeria agreed to his extradition. Taylor (58) gained notoriety for plundering his own West African state, encouraging rebellion in neighbouring Côte d’Ivoire and making Guinea anxious about its own potential for revolution.

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/ 12 March 2006

Liberia denies extradition request for Taylor

A spokesperson for Liberia’s government on Saturday denied the president issued an extradition request for exiled ex-warlord Charles Taylor. Taylor’s wife, Jewel, said her husband received a copy of a letter on Friday purportedly from Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf asking Nigerian head of state Olusegun Obasanjo to extradite Taylor.

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/ 15 February 2006

Liberia’s former exiles dominate new Cabinet

Liberian politicians who fled into exile as a bitter war raged in the West African country are set to dominate the country’s first post-war Cabinet, President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf’s appointments have shown. Of the 19 ministers Johnson-Sirleaf has already named, only six lived in Liberia before last year’s watershed elections.

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/ 2 February 2006

Liberian leader sacks entire finance ministry

Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf summarily sacked the whole staff of the country’s finance ministry during a short surprise visit as she embarked on an anti-corruption campaign. ”All employees of this ministry are hereby dismissed, and will have to apply to come back if they wish,” Johnson-Sirleaf told the employees.

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/ 22 January 2006

Liberian leader concerned about Ivorian crisis

Liberia’s new president says it is crucial the crisis in neighbouring war-divided Côte d’Ivoire be resolved soon, adding the conflict there threatens peace in her own country. ”Liberia’s peace is fragile,” Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf said in an interview on Saturday, one of her first since being sworn in Monday as Africa’s first democratically elected female president.

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/ 16 January 2006

New Liberian leader starts tough job

Thousands of women from all over the continent travelled to celebrate not only the inauguration on Monday of Liberia’s 23rd president, but also, more importantly, to witness the installation of Africa’s first-ever elected female leader, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, who is expected to announce her Cabinet later this week.

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/ 13 January 2006

Monrovia readies for inauguration

Former fighters of Liberia’s brutal war have given their battered capital city a vigorous clean up in preparation for next week’s official installation ceremony of Africa’s first democratically elected female president. The West African country’s transitional government has signed up hundreds of of ex-combatants to spruce up the city.

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/ 23 November 2005

Congratulations, Madam President

Election officials on Wednesday confirmed Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf as the winner in Liberia’s post-war elections, making her Africa’s first-ever elected female President. With all ballots counted, election officials earlier said Johnson-Sirleaf received 59,4% of the vote to soccer superstar George Weah’s 40,6%.

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/ 18 November 2005

Wanted: Honest men and women for Liberian govt

Presumptive president-elect Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf said on Thursday she is looking for a few honest men, and women, to form a government able to tackle the challenge of rebuilding war-torn Liberia. ”There are going to be three basic requirements: the requirement of competence; the requirement of honesty; and the requirement of the regard and protection of human rights,” she told reporters.

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/ 17 November 2005

Confused start to Liberian vote-fraud hearings

Hearings into Liberian presidential candidate George Weah’s claims of vote fraud opened amid confusion on Wednesday, when his lawyers failed to deliver witnesses or documents to back up allegations he was cheated of a rightful win in November 8 polls. Weah’s supporters have held three days of mostly peaceful protests.

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/ 16 November 2005

Liberia opens hearings into vote-fraud claims

Liberian officials on Wednesday opened hearings into claims of vote fraud made by trailing presidential candidate George Weah, who has urged his supporters to quell protests even as the government imposed a ban on demonstrations in the capital. Preliminary results showed that Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf had won nearly 60% of votes.

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/ 13 November 2005

Fresh demonstrations over Liberian election

Supporters of Liberian presidential candidate George Weah, who appears destined for defeat at the hands of economist Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, took to the streets of Monrovia for a second day on Saturday. With more than 99% of votes counted, Unity Party candidate Johnson-Sirleaf has maintained a comfortable lead over Weah.

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/ 11 November 2005

Liberians choose their leader

Liberia’s Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf appeared poised on Friday to become Africa’s first democratically elected female president, claiming victory after results from most of the West African country gave her an apparently unbeatable lead. With almost 91% of ballots counted, the electoral commission said 67-year-old Johnson-Sirleaf held about 59% of Tuesday’s vote.

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/ 9 November 2005

Vote counting under way in Liberia

Liberians crowded around radios on Wednesday awaiting results from the presidential run-off between a millionaire soccer star and the war-ravaged West African nation’s top female politician. Final results in the race between George Weah and Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf will not be announced for two weeks.

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/ 9 November 2005

Liberians vote, pray for peace

War-ravaged Liberia voted to choose its first post-war president in a heated run-off pitting an international soccer star who dropped out of high school against the country’s Harvard-educated top female politician. With United Nations helicopters buzzing over the bombed-out capital, many prayed the vote on Tuesday would herald an era of peace.

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/ 8 November 2005

Liberia’s election: Brains or brawn?

A soccer star vying to become Liberia’s first post-war president vowed to work for peace as he voted on Tuesday in a presidential run-off that many hope will herald a new era after a quarter-century of coups and conflict. George Weah and former finance minister Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf finished first and second, respectively, in the October 11 first round, which weeded out 20 other presidential candidates.

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/ 26 October 2005

Liberian leader to be elected in run-off

A run-off to elect Liberia’s first post-war president was made official on Wednesday with the certification of votes that give footballer George Weah the edge over banker Ellen Johnson Sirleaf going into the November 8 polls. Weah, a high-school dropout with no political experience, has the numbers on his side to win in a landslide.

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/ 24 October 2005

Play for the presidency

Diplomats and civil society activists fear the second round of voting in Liberia’s first elections since the end of the civil war will spark a flurry of behind-the-scenes deal-making that could compromise the new government. The National Electoral Commission announced that former football star George Weah and ex-World Bank official Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf will face off for the presidency on November 8.

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/ 16 October 2005

Taylor’s hopes of returning home may be dashed

Hopes that former Liberian president Charles Taylor’s party would perform well on his behalf have been dashed by early results from last week’s vote, which could undermine his vow to return to Liberia instead of facing war-crimes charges. Taylor remains a mythic figure in his war-ravaged country two years since he fled into exile.