The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Five things George Weah has promised Liberians

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MONROVIA: Former football star George Weah promised to tackle Liberia’s economic and social problems as he was sworn in on Monday in the first democratic transfer of power for more than 70 years.

Here are five things he has pledged to do since his election:

Tackle corruption Failing to tackle endemic corruption among public officials was a key criticism of the outgoing administra­tion of president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

Weah said in his inaugural speech that voters had specifical­ly tasked him with rooting out graft.

“I believe the overwhelmi­ng mandate that I received from the Liberian people is a mandate to end corruption in public service. I promise to deliver on this mandate,” he said.

“As officials of government it is time to put the interests of our people above our own selfish interest. It is time to be honest with our people. Though corruption is a habit among our people, we must end it.”

Help the private sector Weah said he would remove “unnecessar­y restraints” on business in a country that ranks near bottom as a place of doing business rankings despite abundant natural resources.

“To the private sector, I say to you, Liberia is open for business,” he said in his address.

“We will do all that is within our power to provide an environmen­t that will be conducive for the conduct of honest and transparen­t business.”

However, he said he no longer wanted Liberians to be “spectators” in their economy, as Indian and Lebanese immigrants dominate retail and services while Western and Asian firms own the vast majority of rubber, palm oil and iron ore operations.

Youth training Many Liberians missed out on a formal education during the 1989-2003 civil war, and lack the literacy or skills to get jobs outside the informal sector.

Weah said in a speech last week he believed vocational training was the answer to helping this lost generation.

“We need more and better trained teachers not only for our vocational institutio­ns, but equally so for our schools and universiti­es,” said.

“Vocational institutio­ns are the best way forward to enable young adults to enter the job market sooner, as most of them have already assumed family responsibi­lities.”

A bigger funding commitment to schools and training “will be submitted to the National Legislatur­e later this year,” he promised.

Transparen­cy The opaque nature of political deal making, especially over the use of public land, has led to frequent disputes between the local population and private companies in Liberia.

Weah said freedom of speech had strengthen­ed under Sirleaf and promised a more ‘co-operative’ government that was more direct with voters.

“Together we owe our citizens clarity on fundamenta­l issues such as the land beneath their feet, freedom of speech and how national resources and responsibi­lities are going to be shared,” he said after being sworn in. Respect for rights and

democracy Weah paid tribute to the hundreds of thousands of people who died during back-to-back civil wars and said the “immeasurab­le cost of the lesson” was the value of equality and freedom.

“These are the fundamenta­l human rights that our people deserve, and that must be held up and measured against our actions, policies and laws,” he said.

He also urged the population to look beyond tribal and regional affilition and to consider themselves ‘Liberians first’. — AFP

More asylum-seekers to leave remote Australian camps for US resettleme­nt

SYDNEY: Another 58 asylumseek­ers held in an Australian­run detention centre on Papua New Guinea (PNG) will leave yesterday for resettleme­nt in the United States under a controvers­ial refugee swap deal, a source familiar with the plan told Reuters.

The asylum-seekers are the third and largest group to be given US resettleme­nt, ending a three-month hiatus in a transfer programme that had been described by US President Donald Trump as a ‘dumb’ deal.

Holding asylum-seekers in offshore camps, which have been strongly criticised by the United Nations and human rights groups, is part of a hardline immigratio­n policy that has bipartisan political support in Australia.

Australia agreed on the deal with Trump’s predecesso­r Barack Obama late in 2016, under which up to 1,250 refugees held in the Australian camps will be offered residency.

It remains unclear exactly how many will resettled. — Reuters

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 ??  ?? Weah (centre), the country’s former President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf (right), the country’s new Vice-President Jewel Taylor (left) and Weah’s wife Clar Weah attend Weah’s swearing-in ceremony in Monrovia. — AFP photo
Weah (centre), the country’s former President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf (right), the country’s new Vice-President Jewel Taylor (left) and Weah’s wife Clar Weah attend Weah’s swearing-in ceremony in Monrovia. — AFP photo

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