Daily Mail

IT’S PRESIDENT GEORGE WEAH

He was world footballer of the year, Wenger is his mentor and he played for Chelsea but now...

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THE sun had gone down on another sweltering West African day and mosquitoes and bats filled the humid air while goats roamed the sandy ground of this swampland.

In a clearing away from the bamboothat­ch huts that offered slim shelter from the oppressive heat, sat a circle of chairs, 13 of them on the front row, with all eyes turned on the man dressed in a white ‘high-high’ suit, the African tunic and trousers worn by the boss men.

For he was the former Chelsea and Manchester City striker, once the best footballer in the world, George Weah. And today at around lunchtime, if arrangemen­ts go to schedule, which they never do around here, he will be sworn in as the 25th president of Liberia.

We are a 30-minute drive out of Monrovia, the capital of unimaginab­le poverty. It is not so much a journey to where we find Weah at this secluded resort as a slalom of horn-beeping danger, dodging pedestrian­s with food balanced on their heads, snaking motorcycli­sts without helmets and high- speed cars that intermitte­ntly come at you the wrong way.

For the moment, Weah is relaxed, away from the formal engagement­s that lead up to his inaugurati­on. He offers me a plate of jellof — rice, tomatoes and fried chicken and fish — from the buffet and contemplat­es why he is seeking to emulate Samuel K Doe, a president he respected.

A master sergeant in the Liberian Army, Doe mounted a military coup in 1980, ending the rule of Americo-Liberians who had held sway here since the republic was establishe­d by American slaves in the 1820s.

But Doe’s dictatorsh­ip ended with him howling for mercy as his enemies tortured and decapitate­d him. His chief tormentor, Prince Y Johnson, sipped a beer as Doe’s ears were cut off.

Civil war followed from the late Eighties, killing eight per cent of the population of some four million, and then the Ebola illness struck four years ago, further blighting this land fortune forgot.

The stadium where today’s ceremonies will take place is named after Doe. Does Weah not fear for his own chances of success, if not life itself? Why is a man who once earned £30,000 a week and won the FA Cup while briefly on loan at Chelsea in 2000 taking this hideous job?

‘Nobody ever thought I would win the Ballon d’Or,’ Weah told me of his recognitio­n as Europe’s best footballer in 1995, an accolade he took along with the World Footballer of the Year award, making him the only African to win the honour. ‘So I am confident that we can make Liberia a better place. Nothing is impossible.

‘I came from a slum. I had no money. I succeeded. I worked hard. That is what I am calling on Liberians to do now. They have to work with me and take the chances that I am offering them.’ He is not specific about policy.

George Manneh Opong Weah, known as King George to his countrymen and now aged 51, grew up one of 14 siblings and 10,000 unfortunat­e souls in the Claratown community in Monrovia, close to the Montserrad­o River. He kicked a ball in the dust whenever he could, played for local teams before going on to the neighbouri­ng Ivory Coast, where he was recommende­d in 1988 to Monaco, falling under the benign managershi­p of Arsene Wenger.

From there to Paris Saint-Germain before joining AC Milan and winning Serie A in 1996. By the time he arrived in England to make 18 appearance­s, the remarkable power and pace he allied to prodigious skill were on the wane.

But it is Wenger who stands out in Weah’s mind. I ask him about the Arsenal manager. Weah pauses. ‘He is my father,’ he says. ‘He looked after me like a son. He particular­ly helped me in two ways.

‘Do not forget how much racism there was back then. (While at Milan, Weah head- butted Porto’s Jorge ‘ The Animal’ Costa in the tunnel for allegedly racially abusing him.) Arsene showed me concern, even love, to help me overcome those problems.

‘He also taught me discipline. One day, I had a headache, but he told me to be careful with my talent and gave me the belief that I could become a great player if I gave football everything I had. I listened. Besides God, Arsene did more to make me succeed in European football than anyone else. That is why I have invited him to be at my inaugurati­on.’

Weah’s people do not know if that offer will be accepted but, as of late yesterday morning, they were making preparatio­ns as though it would be — although that is perhaps unlikely given Wednesday night’s Carabao Cup semifinal, second leg against Chelsea.

All bumpy roads in Liberia seem to lead to football, from kids playing on the street to adult obsession with the game in Europe. Manchester United, Chelsea, Arsenal, Liverpool for the older set, Manchester City for the younger, along with Real Madrid and Barcelona.

Even in the jungle interior, where poverty cuts deeper than in the city, they log on to phones and absorb every game of European football. Go into the Winners betting shop on one of the main Monrovia streets any afternoon and rows of men stand to watch reruns of English and Spanish games. Fanatics have been stabbed to death due to a football rivalry transplant­ed from a continent virtually none of them has ever seen. Weah has ploughed some of his own money back into Liberian football, not least founding Junior Profession­als in his own community, just as he bankrolled the national team — the Lone Stars — when he was the leading player. He also funded a school next to his boyhood house. Yet, for some reason, his family still live in that little dwelling he was born in. His shy sister, Rebecca Nogbeh, asks for a can of soda in return for an ‘interview’.

She is proud of George and will be going to today’s ceremonial installati­on wearing a specially made dress. But, still, there she is chiselling a chunk of coal into smaller shavings to sell on so that she can eat.

Having failed to become president when he first tried in 2005, Weah was the overwhelmi­ng winner this time, taking more than 60 per cent of the vote. The people clambered into every space to catch a glimpse of him on his many speaking engagement­s last week. They cheered him fervidly.

He told them that after retiring from football, he went to college to study for diplomas aged 40, addressing the accusation that he is a high-school failure — not a ‘bookman’, as they say here. It makes Ron Atkinson’s slip of the tongue while commentati­ng on Weah — he called him ‘the big librarian’ — all the more piquant.

Education is surely a keyy to improve-improvemen­t for Liberia, a countryy so rich in rubber yet one in which they do not have the wit even to make a condom.

Yesterday, Weah was at church, driven there in a 4x4 with blacked- outt windows. This is a largelyy Christian and highly religious society and Weah and his Jamaican wife Clar worship regularly.

In a land where moree than eight out of every 100 people, many of themm former child soldiers off a hellish w a r, barely exist on just on a pound a day, President Weah will need all the assistance he can summon.on.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Strike duo: Weah with Sportsmail’s Chris Sutton at Chelsea in 2000
GETTY IMAGES Strike duo: Weah with Sportsmail’s Chris Sutton at Chelsea in 2000

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