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Old August 13th, 2009 #1
Mike Parker
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 3,311
Default African view: Land of liberty?

[Liberia is where American niggers were supposed to move to improve their lives.]

African view: Land of liberty?



In our series of viewpoints from African journalists, as US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrives in Liberia, Farai Sevenzo considers why the country is such a conundrum 162 years after freed slaves from the US landed on its shores.

I was away in West Africa last week, visiting a land I had previously heard about only through its not so distant past.

For Liberia has a past that gave us rebel soldiers, ensured that the term child soldier slipped easily into African consciousness, and showed us the depths to which the human spirit could sink, and the heights to which it could soar.

The warlords are gone, self-declared generals with names like "Butt Naked" have undergone a kind of religious metamorphosis into preachers and men of peace, the ranks of the rebel soldiers have dissolved into a heaving mass of the disarmed and unemployed, and their one time leader - Charles Taylor - is in The Hague, answering questions in the Special Court for Sierra Leone.

Liberia is a conundrum of sorts. There will come a time, one day in the far distant future, when the histories of African countries will be uttered like fables, as if the things which really did happen in the births of nations were too far-fetched to have been real.

Of course anyone can have such a thought when you look closely at where Liberia has come from - and that is not just the last 20 years or so of uncertainty and war, but also the last 162 years, since America's great colonial experiment began.

In this new century, the last war has been over for some five or six years and Liberians are trying to open a new chapter with the ghosts of hostilities past still very much in their minds. Can they do it?

At John L Roberts International Airport, my eyes are filled with two letters of the alphabet - a "U" and an "N".

For even as the plane lands, all you can see is the archangel white of the massive United Nations presence.

At the last count more than 13,000 strong and all over the airport tarmac in the moody heat of Monrovia's rainy season is the massive machinery of peacekeeping - helicopters, tanks, jeeps, lorries and buses.

In post-conflict Liberia, such a massive presence suggests a ferocious conflict whose repetition cannot be allowed.

It is a beautiful country, hills and rivers too numerous to mention; acres upon acres of unexplored rainforests; gold, diamonds and rubber over a huge expanses; and a population of only three and a half million to enjoy it all.

Liberia could be like one of those small Gulf nations with so few people and too many natural resources for its own good.

But this was the land that gave us murder and mayhem as the 20th Century drew to a close, whose child soldiers smoked gun powder and all manner of drugs, whose warlords practised cannibalism and whose citizens - young and old and maimed - will have a memory of the worst days of the crisis.

And so, wandering the city's hotels and watering holes, the stories of displacement war and terror still amaze.

"It was really bad," a woman not much older than my teenage daughter confides, "there was no such thing as school for us, we always had to be moving.

"So many bodies, if you had seen them you would have lost your appetite."

Forever looking backwards?

But never mind my appetite, how do Liberians find the stomach to relive their horror stories in a truth and reconciliation process? And was it enough?


Milton Blahyi was known as "Gen Butt Naked" as he fought with no clothes

From Grand Kru to Lofa County from Nimba to Grand Bassa normality of sorts has returned.

The roads are bumpy but negotiable, the markets are full of traders, the citizens of the land of liberty are swarming home from every refugee corner and every life of exile as if a silent migratory signal has been set off calling them back to their nests.

But still the shadow of the past is in every conversation, from the indicted leader in The Hague, who is filling newspaper inches every other day - and there are an awful lot of newspapers in Liberia - to the young adults whose education was disrupted, to the nation's ruling elite.

At the helm is President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, whose task of uniting a once-fractured and divided society is too enormous to be judged prematurely.

Even as she stresses the huge work ahead for her nation, there are those who are questioning her decision once upon a time to have given money to someone like Charles Taylor.

But as much as the immediate past demands scrutiny and explanation, it is the long view and a different set of questions which seem to matter.

Liberia has 90% illiteracy in some parts. It is difficult to imagine what such high levels of illiteracy can do to a nation.

Why do so many villages remain remote to the advantages of the 21st Century? Why do tribal loyalties take precedence over national ones? Why is the influence of America, the super-power partner for over a century and a half, not seen in a better light?

And what, if anything can prevent the tragedy of the land of liberty from being repeated?

As Mrs Clinton gets to Monrovia, she should think long-term partner instead of strategic stooge.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8198396.stm
 
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