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President
Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf's Speech to
the U.S.
Congress
Delivered March 15,
2006
Mr.
Speaker, Mr. Vice
President, Members
of the United States
Congress
distinguished
guests,
I
am deeply touched by
the honor bestowed
on my small but
proud West African
Republic of Liberia
and on myself by
inviting me to
address this body of
representatives of
the people of the
great United States
of America. By
this invitation, you
have paid one of the
greatest tributes
there is to those
who laid down their
lives for my country
to be free and
democratic. I
can only say a big
thank you. The
people of Liberia
and the people of
the United States
are bound together
by history and by
values. We share a
deep and abiding
belief in the power
of freedom, of faith
and of finding
virtue in work for
the common good.
The
national motto of
Liberia - founded,
as you know, by
freed American
slaves - is
"The Love of
Liberty Brought us
here." We
became the first
independent Republic
in Africa. Our
capital, Monrovia,
is named for your
president James
Monroe. Our flag is
a star
in a blue field and
red and white
stripes - its one
star makes us the
lone star state in
Africa. Our
constitution and our
laws were based upon
yours. The U.S.
dollar was long our
legal tender and
still is used
alongside the
Liberian dollar
today.
But
our ties greatly
exceed the
historical
connection. I stand
before you today, as
the first woman
elected to lead an
African nation,
thanks to the grace
of Almighty God;
thanks to the
courage of the
Liberian people, who
chose their future
over fear; thanks to
the people of west
Africa and of Africa
generally, who
continued to give
hope to my people.
Thanks also to
President Bush whose
strong resolve and
public condemnation
and appropriate
action forced a
tyrant into exile
and thanks to you -
the members of this
august body - who
spurred the
international effort
that brought blessed
peace to our nation.
It
was the leadership
of the 108th
Congress, more than
two years ago, that
paved the way for a
United Nations force
that secured our
peace and guaranteed
free and fair
elections. It was
your 445 million
dollar addition to a
supplemental
appropriation that
attracted additional
commitments from
international
donors. With those
funds, we have laid
the foundation for a
durable peace, not
only in Liberia, but
in the whole West
African sub-region.
Special appreciation
goes to this 109th
Congress for the
effort, in recent
weeks, to meet
Liberia's
development needs.
Honorable
ladies and gentlemen
of this Congress, I
want to thank you.
The Liberian people
have sent me here to
thank you - thank
you for your vision.
Our triumph over
evil is also your
triumph. Our special
relationship with
the United States
brought us benefits
long before the
autumn of 2003.
Thousands of our
people, including
myself, have been
educated in American
missionary schools
and gone on to
higher training in
this country. You
have generously
welcomed tens of
thousands of our
people as they fled
war and persecution.
I
was among them. In
1985, after
challenging the
military regime's
failure to register
my political party,
I was put in jail
with several
university students
who also challenged
the military rule.
This House came to
our rescue with a
resolution
threatening to cut
off aid to the
country unless all
political prisoners
were released.
Months later, I was
put in jail again,
this time in a cell
with 15 men. All of
them were executed a
few hours later.
Only the
intervention of a
single soldier
spared me from rape.
Through the grace of
Almighty God and the
mercy of others, I
escaped and found
refuge here, in
Washington, D.C. But
long before that,
our country and I
benefited from
Liberia's special
relationship with
the United States.
My
family exemplifies
the economic and
social divide that
has torn our nation.
Unlike many
privileged
Liberians, I can
claim no American
lineage. Three of my
grandparents were
indigenous
Liberians; the
fourth was a German
who married a rural
market woman. That
Grandfather was
forced to leave the
country when Liberia
- in loyalty to the
United States -
declared war on
Germany in 1914.
Both
of my grandmothers
were farmers and
village traders.
They could not read
or write any
language - as more
than three-quarters
of our people still
cannot today - but
they worked hard,
they loved their
country, they loved
their families and
they believed in
education. They
inspired me then,
and their memory
motivates me now to
serve my people, to
sacrifice for the
world and honestly
serve humanity. I
could not, I will
not - I cannot -
betray their trust.
My
parents were sent at
a young age to
Monrovia, where it
was common for elite
families to take in
children from the
countryside to
perform domestic
chores. They endured
humiliations and
indignities, but my
mother was fortunate
to be adopted by a
kind woman, and both
my parents were able
through this system
to go to school - a
rarity at that time
for poor people. My
father even became
the first native
Liberian in the
Liberian National
Legislature.
I
was not born with
the expectation of a
University education
from Harvard or
being a World Bank
officer or an
Assistant
Secretary-General of
the United Nations.
When I was a small
girl in the
countryside,
swimming and fishing
with twine made from
palm trees, no one
would have picked me
out as the future
president of our
country. I graduated
from the College of
West Africa, a
United Methodist
high school. I
waited tables to
support my studies
in the United States
- college in
Wisconsin and
graduate school in
Massachusetts. I
went on to enjoy the
benefits and
advantages of a
world-class
education.
So
my feet are in two
worlds - the world
of poor rural women
with no respite from
hardship, and the
world of
accomplished
Liberian
professionals, for
whom the United
States is a second
and beloved home. I
draw strength from
both. But most of
our people have not
been as fortunate as
I was. Always poor
and underdeveloped,
Liberia is only now
emerging from two
decades of turmoil
that destroyed
everything we
managed to build in
a century and a half
of independence.
The
cost of our conflict
run wide and deep,
manifested in varied
ways -
mismanagement,
corruption, bad
governance, massive
looting of public
treasury and assets.
Unlike the Tsunami
in Asia and Katrina
here in your own
country, where the
destruction and
human casualty were
caused by nature, we
participated in or
stood silently by in
our own self
destruction. Our
country agonized
with your citizens
and victims and
families of these
natural tragedies
and our country also
agonized with itself
over the effects of
a senseless civil
war.
In
the campaign months,
I traveled to every
corner of our
country. I trudged
through mud in high
boots, where roads
did not exist or had
deteriorated past
repair. I surveyed
ruined hospitals and
collapsed clinics. I
held meetings by
candlelight, because
there is no
electricity anywhere
- including the
capital - except
from private
generators. I was
forced to drink
water from creeks
and un-sanitized
wells all of which
made me vulnerable
to the diseases from
which so many of our
people die daily.
I
came face to face
with the human
devastation of war,
which killed a
quarter of a million
of our three million
people and displaced
most of the rest.
Hundreds of
thousands escaped
across borders. More
- who could not -
fled into the bush,
constantly running
from one militia or
another, often
surviving by eating
rodents and wild
plants that made
them sick and even
killed them. Our
precious children
died of malaria,
parasites and
mal-nourishments.
Our boys, full of
potential, were
forced to be child
soldiers, to kill or
be killed. Our
girls, capable of
being anything they
could imagine, were
made into sex
slaves, gang-raped
by men with guns,
made mothers while
they were still
children themselves.
But
listening to the
hopes and dreams of
our people, I recall
the words of a
Mozambican poet who
said, "Our
dream has the size
of freedom." My
people, like your
people, believe
deeply in freedom -
and, in their
dreams, they reach
for the heavens. I
represent those
dreams. I represent
their hope and their
aspirations. I ran
for president
because I am
determined to see
good governance in
Liberia in my
lifetime. But I also
ran because I am the
mother of four, and
I wanted to see our
children smile
again.
Already,
I am seeing those
smiles. For even
after everything
they have endured,
the people of
Liberia have faith
in new beginnings.
They are counting on
me and my
administration to
create the
conditions that will
guarantee the
realization of their
dreams. We must not
betray their trust.
All the children I
meet - when I ask
what they want most
- say, "I want
to learn."
"I want to go
to school."
"I want an
education." We
must not betray
their trust.
Young
adults, who have
been called our
'lost generation,'
do not consider
themselves lost.
They, too, aspire to
learn and to serve
their families and
their communities.
We must not betray
their trust. Women,
my strong
constituency, tell
me that they want
the same chances
that men have. They
want to be literate.
They want their work
recognized. They
want protection
against rape. They
want clean water
that won't sicken
and kill their
children. We must
not betray their
trust.
Former
soldiers tell me
they are tired of
war; they do not
want to have to
fight or to run
again. They want
training. They want
jobs. If they carry
guns, they want to
do so in defense of
peace and security,
not war and pillage.
We must not betray
their trust.
Entrepreneurs who
have returned from
abroad with all
their resources -
risking everything
to invest in their
country's future -
tell me they want a
fair and transparent
regulatory
environment. They
want honesty and
accountability from
their government. We
must not betray
their trust.
Farming
families who fled
the fighting for
shelter in
neighboring
countries or found
themselves displaced
from their
communities want a
fresh start. They
want to return home.
They want seeds.
They want farm
implements. They
want roads to get
their goods to
market. We must not
betray their trust.
I have many promises
to keep. As I won
elections through a
free and peaceful
process, I must
preserve freedom and
keep the peace. As I
campaigned against
corruption, I must
lead a government
that curbs it. As I
was elected with the
massive vote of
women, I must assure
that their needs are
met.
We
are not oblivious to
the enormity of the
challenges we face.
Few countries have
been as decimated as
ours. In the chaos
of war, our HIV
rates have
quadrupled. Our
children are still
dying of curable
diseases,
tuberculosis,
dysentery, measles,
malaria and
parasites and
malnutrition.
Schools lack books,
equipment, teachers
and buildings. The
telecommunications
age has passed us
by. We have a 3.5
billion dollar
external debt, lent
in large measure to
some of my
predecessors who
were known to be
irresponsible,
unaccountable,
unrepresentative and
corrupt. The reality
that we have lost
our international
creditworthiness
bars us from further
loans - although now
we would use them
wisely.
Our
abundant natural
resources have been
diverted by criminal
conspiracies for
private gain.
International
sanctions, imposed
for the best of
reasons, still
prevent us from
exporting our raw
materials. Roads and
bridges have
disappeared or been
bombed or washed
away. We know that
trouble could once
again breed outside
our borders. The
physical and
spiritual scars of
war are deep indeed.
So
with everything to
be done, what must
we do first? We must
do everything we can
to consolidate the
peace that so much
was paid to secure,
and we must work to
heal the wounds of
war. We must
create an emergency
public works program
to put the whole
nation to work and
give families an
income through the
rebuilding of
critical
infrastructure,
strengthening
security and
attracting
investment. We must
rehabilitate the
core of an
electricity grid to
high-priority areas
and institutions -
and visibly
demonstrate to the
people that
government can
provide necessary
services.
We
must bring home more
of our refugees, and
resettle the
displaced. We
must give them the
tools to start anew,
and encourage more
of our skilled
expatriates, who
have the knowledge
and the experience
to build our economy
to return home.
For those unable to
come home now, we
must appeal to you
to grant them
continuing
protective status,
and residency where
appropriate, to put
them in a condition
to contribute to
their country's
reform and
development.
We
must complete the
demobilization of
former combatants
and restructure our
army, police and
security services.
We must create legal
systems that
preserve the rule of
law, applied to all
without fear or
favor. We must
revive educational
facilities,
including our few
universities. We
must provide
essential
agricultural
extension services
to help us feed
ourselves again,
developing the
science and
technology skills to
insure that we
prosper in a modern
global economy. We
must create an
efficient and
transparent tax
system, to ensure
the flow of
government revenues
and create a
hospitable
investment climate.
With
few resources beyond
the will of our
people, I want you
to know we have made
a strong beginning.
During my first few
weeks in office, by
curbing corruption
we have increased
government revenue
by 21 percent,
relative to the same
period last year.
We have cancelled
non compliant
forestry concessions
and fraudulent
contracts. We have
required senior
government
appointees to
declare financial
assets; implemented
cash management
practices to insure
fiscal discipline
and sharpen
efficiency; met the
basic requirements
for eligibility
under the US general
system of
preferences and
initial Exim Bank
support. We have
restored good
relationships with
bilateral and
multilateral
partners; commenced
the process leading
to an IMF Staff
Monitoring Program;
accelerated
implementation of
the Governance
Economic Management
Plan - the G-Map;
and we have also
launched a Truth and
Reconciliation
Commission to
investigate the
abuses of war.
But
while we seek
national unity and
reconciliation, we
must not sacrifice
justice. I respect
the life-saving role
that our West
African neighbors,
particularly
Nigeria, played at
no small cost to
them in accepting to
host Mr. Charles
Taylor. Liberians
are deeply grateful.
But I say here, as I
have said before,
Liberia has little
option but to see
that justice is done
in accordance with
the requirements of
the United Nations
and the broad
international
community.
I
know that my
government must go
beyond these strong
beginnings; must do
much more than we
have done so far,
and we must do it
quickly. Our
people's courage and
patience are
formidable, but
their expectations
are high. And their
needs are urgent.
This does not mean
that we want big
government. We
cannot afford it,
and we believe that
government should
not attempt to do
what civil society
and business can do
better. The people
of Liberia know that
government cannot
save the country -
only their own
strength, their
determination, their
creativity,
resilience and their
faith can do that.
But they have the
right to expect the
essentials that only
a government can
provide.
They
have the right to a
government that is
honest and that
respects the
sanctity of human
life. They need and
they deserve an
economic environment
in which their
efforts can succeed.
They need
infrastructure and
they need security.
Above all, they need
peace. That is the
task of my
administration. To
meet that challenge,
to do what is right,
I ask for the
continuing support
of this Congress and
the American people.
Honorable
Ladies and
Gentlemen, my appeal
comes with the
recognition of all
that you have
already done. In
addition to the
financial assistance
to disarm our
fighters, to feed
and house our
displaced, the
artful diplomacy of
the United States
was central to
ending our long
conflict. We thank
you with all our
hearts.
As
small and as
impoverished as we
are, we cherish the
friendship we have
had with you. During
the Second World
War, we stood
together, even if
only symbolically,
to fight Nazi
expansionism and
tyranny. At the
request of President
Roosevelt, we
planted rubber trees
after the Japanese
seized the
Indonesian supply.
When U.S. laws
prohibited sending
ships to a Europe at
war, we agreed to
establish a shipping
registry to help
transport American
goods.
During
the Cold War, we
hosted a submarine
tracking center, an
intelligence
listening post and
one of the largest
Voice of America
transmitters in the
world. Again, we ask
that we continue
working together but
we do not ask for
patronage. We do not
want to continue in
dependency. The
benefits of your
assistance must be
mutual.
Honorable
members of Congress,
much is at stake for
all of us.
Liberia
at war brought
misery and crimes
against humanity to
its neighbors - a
toll that is beyond
calculation. A
peaceful, prosperous
Liberia can
contribute to
democracy, stability
and development in
West Africa and
beyond.
Nine
times - nine times!
- in the past 15
years, the United
States has been
forced to evacuate
official Americans
and their dependents
from our country, at
enormous cost to
your taxpayers.
Monrovia, I am told,
is the
most-evacuated U.S.
embassy in the
world. I am
determined that you
will not need to
rescue your people
from our shores for
a tenth time. You
contribute hundreds
of millions of
dollars to a UN
Peacekeeping Force
in Liberia. A
fraction of this
will be required to
support a peaceful
and stable Liberia.
Honorable
Members of this
great Congress,
think with me about
this. What is the
return on an
investment that
trains young
combatants for life,
rather than death?
What is the yield
when our young men
can exchange their
guns for jobs? What
is the savings in
food aid when our
people can feed
themselves again?
What is the profit
from educating our
girls to be
scientists and
doctors? What is the
dividend when our
dependence ends, and
we become true
partners rather than
supplicants?
Honorable
Members, we know
that there is no
quick fix for the
reconstruction of
our country, but
Liberians, young and
old, share their
government's
commitments to work,
to be honest, to
unite, to reconcile
and to rebuild. A
nation so well
endowed, so blessed
by God with natural
resources, should
not be poor. We have
rubber and timber
and diamonds and
gold and iron ore.
Our fields are
fertile. Our water
supply is plentiful.
Our sunshine is warm
and welcoming.
With
your prayers and
with your help, we
will demonstrate
that democracy can
work, even under the
most challenging
conditions. We will
honor the suffering
of our people, and
Liberia will become
a brilliant beacon,
an example to Africa
and the world of
what the love of
liberty can achieve.
We will strive to be
America's success
story in Africa,
demonstrating the
potential in the
transformation from
war to peace;
demonstrating the
will to join in the
global fight against
terrorism;
demonstrating that
democracy can
prevail,
demonstrating that
prosperity can be
achieved.
The
people of Liberia
have already rolled
up their sleeves,
despite overwhelming
obstacles, confident
that their work will
be rewarded,
confident in the
hope and promise of
the future. The
women of Liberia and
the women of Africa,
some in the market
place and some in
high level of
Government have
already shared their
trust and their
confidence in my
ability to succeed,
and ensure that the
doors of competitive
politics and
professionalism will
be opened even wider
for them.
Honorable
members, I will
succeed. I will not
betray their trust.
I will make them
proud - I will make
you proud - of the
difference which one
woman with abiding
faith in God can do.
God
bless you.
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