Seven
years ago, the United Nations intervened in Liberia to pave the way for peace
after almost 20 years of political decay, economic dislocation, social
mismanagement, forced migration and severe population displacement. Many in the
international Community were convinced that the UN was better able to bring
about peace, respect for the rule of law, and facilitate good governance and
economic activities to restore Liberia to an expectable level of normalcy where
basic life would be restored.
There
is no disagreement by this author that the United Nation and its permanent
member states have stepped up to the plate when Liberia needed them the most.
The world body demonstrated an unbridled degree of support in trying diligently
to fixing the many ills of the Liberian society, especially those that were not
at the surface. Fundamental problems still persistently exist and remain at the
crux of our stalled effort to recover and induce opportunity to truly transform
the society. However, no outsider, no matter how passionate their determination
can ever understand or repair the root causes of the collapse of our society
without first dealing historically with basic causes of issues that are embedded
in our socio-economic arrangement and geo-political system.
The
UN presence has harnessed the fragile peace reached in 2003. Its presence on the
ground is directly responsible for all levels of economic activities made and
gains realized in all sectors of the country. The credit for this level of
success is of course the UN military presence, which has given every Liberian
hope, peace and reasonable levels of individual liberties and fundamental
freedoms. However, it is reasonable for one to conclude that many of the
critical United Nations projects and programs needed to ensure sustainability
and continued stability to restore the country to a safer level of normalcy have
failed.
Many
ordinary Liberians have serious trepidation if not absolute anxiety or outright
nervousness about what would happen after 2011. This author offers four examples
of areas where the United Nations have serious shortcomings, which could in fact
jeopardize all the gains made since 2003 if nothing more is done over the next
three years.
Example
# 1: The restructuring of the
National Police Force by the UN has fallen flat on its face. The police force is
just as corrupt today as they were under the brutal regime of Charles Taylor.
Their pay scale is a joke, their professionalism questionable, their judgment
about criminal justice and basic civil rights, laughable. They are so
ill-prepared for peace-building; it’s embarrassing to ask about social
responsibility. If anyone believes what the UN has done with the Liberian
National Police will inject or sustain fundamental change, then why do so many
of our so-called big wigs still think of the police as messengers and errand
guys and gals as Charles Taylor once did, and like many in the out-of-date
True Whig Party once did?
Example
# 2: The United Nations has not
extended the rule of law outside the confines of the Monrovia Metropolitan Area
(MMA) especially into rural areas, where the vast majority of Liberians needing
the most assistance and enlightenment in seeing the government effectively
function, live and reside. Good governance, democratic practices, provision of
basic services and the administration of justice remains elusive and still a
pipe dream for many Liberians.
Example
# 3:
Liberia is
not yet on track to achieving the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs),
including reducing by 2015 the under-five mortality rate to 50 per 1,000 live
births from 187. More than 2 million Liberians still struggle with daunting and
dehumanizing social challenges, which remain a drag on improving livelihood and
living standards.
Example
# 4: With the United Nations standing
strong in Liberia for seven years, seventy-nine
per cent of Liberians still lack basic access to decent toilets; while more than
fifty-nine per cent still lack access to safe drinking water, and eighty-five
per cent still have no access to adequate waste management or proper hygiene
practice. As a result, twenty-five per cent of children still die before age 5;
nineteen per cent of children still die from diarrhea and infectious conditions
caused by waterborne diseases. In addition, forty per cent of children are still
stunted from malnutrition, while another forty per cent still do not have access
to safe drinking water, and thirty-six per cent of Liberians still die from
malaria caused by mosquitoes feeding on rotten garbage or incubating in
disgustingly filthy, dirty, nasty water.
Example
# 5: Over eighty per cent of
Liberians do not know what the Poverty Reduction Strategy (PRS) is or what it
means for them. The
PRS– is the roadmap that describes the Sirleaf administration’s strategy for
dealing with macroeconomic, structural and social policies and programs to
promote growth and reduce poverty, as well as associated external financing
needs and sources of financing for Liberia.
But, it
is yet to
significantly transform the society in a way that impacts the lives of ordinary
people. It is not a functional change agent to average Liberians. The PRS has
the propensity to fail because it negates some fundamental and basic bedrock
measures, which are required to enhance fundamental social transformation.
For
example, without fundamental services like solid waste management (SWM),
sanitation, safe water and hygiene promotion and preventable public health
issues being tackled first, projects to improve the economy by themselves are
likely to fail. Again, environmental health issues like sanitation, water,
garbage and hygiene arguably pose the greatest threat to Liberians now other
than war. Together, these areas have a more negative impact on preventable
illnesses and health conditions such as malnutrition,
typhoid, diarrhea, malaria and
infectious conditions, which persistently
causes high rates of poverty throughout the country.
The
question on the Liberian street is, "what happens to the country when the
United Nation departs, or when President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf decides to honor
her consecrated and sacred contract with the Liberia people, which she declared
before God with her right hand on the Holy Bible, and proclaimed that she would
only serve the Liberian People for one term?"
Here’s
what Liberians are pondering and rationalizing from a logical perspective:
1.
What would happen to the more than
230,000 children who have been orphaned by disease and the war, and now live on
the streets, or in orphanages and adoption homes? Will the Ministry of Health
continue to promote its bogus claim that a sensible, levelheaded and sound
alternative like inter-country adoption is child trafficking?
2.
What would happen to 37% of
Liberian children under five who still suffer from chronic malnutrition while
7% of them continue to suffer from acute malnutrition,
causing stunting in nearly
one-third of them; thereby leaving one in five Liberian children underweight?
3.
What would happen to the more than
500,000 school children, as UNICEF says, who are not in school, or those going
to school each day only to sit on the bare floor without desks, or properly
trained teachers to provide appropriate instructions, and adequate books to
learn from?
4.
What would happen to the more than
80% of women who die in childbirth, due to the lack of basic healthcare delivery
system, for which the World Health Organization
lists Liberia as one of the top ten riskiest countries in the world for giving
birth?
5.
What would happen to people living
in urban, peri-urban and rural areas where sanitation, safe water, proper
hygiene, environmental health, garbage collection and public health, are still
serious challenge s to living each day?
6.
What would happen to the 80%
of Liberians who still live below the poverty-line with an unemployment rate
that still stands at
85%?
Recent
editorials in the country concluded that the fault is not entirely that of the
Unite Nations. Those editorials place the blame of failure at the door step of
the Sirleaf administration. These editorials thoughtfully, proclaimed that
‘the Sirleaf administration must take primary responsible for politicizing
social life in the country and making partisanship and narrow self-interest the
lay of the political landscape. They insist that the government lack the
political will to take and implement key decisions with serious reforms as the
objective. The editorials concluded that the Sirleaf administration will never
bring about significant social transformation unless and until some fundamental
principles are injected into public policies that are necessary for tackling
reforms, especially those at the grassroots levels which deal specifically with
the provision of environmental and social services, preventable illnesses and
diseases to change attitude, behavior and mindset.
This
author would conceive that the Sirleaf administration has made and taken some
very necessary and key decisions to correct some of our past mistakes and
shortcomings, but without effective alternative measures to deal with corruption
and the provisions of basic services, our past could come right back to haunt
us, and this time, it could be more terrifying than anyone can imagine, wiping
out significant gains so painstakingly made by President Sirleaf.
Based
on the finding by Transparency International, a global civil society
organization leading the fight against corruption, Liberia is one of the
world’s most corrupt nations. Our country’s underdevelopment is
attributable to a multiplicity of factors with corruption being at the
foremost. Corruption
is a de facto way of life in Liberia, and our government must continue
to single out those who choose this way of life and prosecute
them to the full extent of the law. Precipitating
factors for dishonesty are colossal in Liberia.
At all levels of our society, corruption has had negative consequences
on the quality of life forcing many persons to remain incompetent, poor, weak,
intolerant and dysfunctional. This causes many of our people to be deficient
in areas of civility and courtesy.
Corruption
is a plague on the Liberian Nation State. The lack of accountability and
transparency, lack of merit system, which encourages nepotism and political
patronage, and underpayment of public servants are all contributing factors to
corruption. It is a menace to our society, which must be minimized or eradicated
regardless of its chronic and strangle hold on our people. It accounts for the
unnecessary increase in the budgetary pressure on the government; and is a
trigger for the miscarriage of justice in all sectors of the society. It
undermines democratic values such as trust, transparency, and tolerance in the
new democratic political dispensation Liberians are enjoying under the
leadership of President Sirleaf.
The
National Legislature too must be proactive and reform minded. This branch of
government holds many of the cards in the deck to inject significant social
transformation into our country and influence the plight of our people. The
national interest must come first and prevail foremost in all matters rather
than the other way around.
As
Liberians, we need to work together to raise our expectations as a
collective in order to transform our society into world-class, high-performing
communities - not just for some, but for all our people, especially those at the
bottom.