George Weah ‘poised to become Liberia’s next leader’

Former Chelsea star George Weah is on the verge of winning Liberia’s presidential election, his team has claimed.

The 51-year-old, considered one of Africa’s greatest ever footballers, is aiming to succeed President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who is stepping down after 12 years as the continent’s first elected female head of state. 

This afternoon, Weah’s campaign manager for operations, Morluba Morlu, predicted victory with 70 per cent of the vote based on precinct-level vote tallies he said were trickling in from across the country after Tuesday’s vote. 

The footballer has sparked controversy after naming Jewel Howard-Taylor, wife of cannibal warlord Charles Taylor, as his pick for vice president.

Charles Taylor is serving a 50-year sentence in Britain for war crimes committed in neighbouring Sierra Leone, but his presence has loomed large over the election.

This morning, Weah, who also played for AC Milan during a glittering career that saw him win the Ballon D’Or and FIFA World Player of the Year, took to Twitter to tell of his ‘deep emotion’ and ‘to thank you, the Liberian people, for honoring me with your vote today. It is a great hope.’ 

George Weah prepares to cast his ballot for the second round of presidential elections on December 26 at a polling station in Monrovia

The footballer has sparked controversy after naming Jewel Howard-Taylor (left), wife of cannibal warlord Charles Taylor (right), as his pick for vice president

The footballer has sparked controversy after naming Jewel Howard-Taylor (left), wife of cannibal warlord Charles Taylor (right), as his pick for vice president

George Weah picking up the Ballon d'Or in 1995 whilst playing for AC Milan in Italy

George Weah arrives to vote

George Weah picking up the Ballon d’Or in 1995 whilst playing for AC Milan in Italy (left) and arriving to vote yesterday (right)

Former Chelsea star George Weah has tweeted his thanks to voters as he closes in on his bid to become Liberia's next leader

Former Chelsea star George Weah has tweeted his thanks to voters as he closes in on his bid to become Liberia’s next leader

Vote counting started earlier today following a peaceful run-off election for a new president, pitting former international footballer George Weah against Vice-President Joseph Boakai.

Voters were choosing a successor to President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who is stepping down after 12 years as Africa’s first elected female head of state.

Official results of Tuesday’s vote are expected in a few days, in what would be the West African country’s first democratic transition since 1944, according to electoral officials.

The ballot was delayed for seven weeks due to legal challenges lodged by Boakai’s Unity Party against the electoral commission over the conduct of the first round of voting, but many of the complaints appeared to have been addressed in the second round.

The Liberia Elections Observation Network, which had more than 1,000 observers stationed across the country, hailed a vote it said had passed calmly with better organisation than the first poll on October 10, as did observers from the European Union.

George Weah casts his vote in the presidential election and hopes the nation will follow suit

George Weah casts his vote in the presidential election and hopes the nation will follow suit

George Weah poses with the lid of the FA Cup lid on his head after Chelsea beat Aston Villa 1-0 in the last FA Cup final ever held at the old Wembley Stadium

George Weah poses with the lid of the FA Cup lid on his head after Chelsea beat Aston Villa 1-0 in the last FA Cup final ever held at the old Wembley Stadium

Former Nigerian president Goodluck Jonathan, who served as an electoral observer for the US-based National Democratic Institute (NDI), said a successful resolution to the process was of particular importance within the international community.

‘This transition is critical and if we succeed, if Liberia succeeds, West Africa succeeded and Africa succeeded,’ he said.

‘There has been no major incident to report of a technical nature and the voting was peaceful,’ noted electoral commission chief Francis Korkoya.

But with the vote held the day after Christmas, some national and international observers warned that turnout may have been affected.

As Liberia’s most famous son, Weah attracts huge crowds and has a faithful youth following in a country where a fifth of the electorate is aged between 18 and 22. But he has been criticised for his performance in the Senate, where he has served since 2014.

Weah, 51, starred in top-flight European football teams Paris Saint-Germain and AC Milan in the 1990s before playing briefly for Chelsea and Manchester City later in his career having emerged from Liberia’s slums to become a superstar.

George Weah, former football player and presidential candidate of Congress for Democratic Change (CDC), arrives to cast his ballot during presidential elections at a polling station in Monrovia, Liberia

George Weah, former football player and presidential candidate of Congress for Democratic Change (CDC), arrives to cast his ballot during presidential elections at a polling station in Monrovia, Liberia

Liberian born forward of AC Milan George Weah  makes his way between Internazionale defenders Taribo West, left, and Luigi Sartor, during their Italian major league match in Milan in 1997

Liberian born forward of AC Milan George Weah  makes his way between Internazionale defenders Taribo West, left, and Luigi Sartor, during their Italian major league match in Milan in 1997

HOW BRUTAL CHARLES TAYLOR’S WIFE IS STILL IN POLITICS

Liberian presidential candidate George Weah’s running mate Jewel Howard-Taylor began life in politics as first lady to former warlord leader Charles Taylor, but has since established a formidable political reputation in her own right.

Howard-Taylor was a surprise pick for vice-president on the ticket of the footballer turned politician, as many expected her to run for the top job herself.

Her National Patriotic Party (NPP) was formed in 1997 by members of the National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL) – Charles Taylor’s rebel fighters – to allow him to run for president in hopes of ending a civil war that began in 1989.

Jewel Howard-Taylor, right, married Charles Taylor just before he was elected Liberian president in 1997

Jewel Howard-Taylor, right, married Charles Taylor just before he was elected Liberian president in 1997

She married Liberia’s most powerful warlord just before he was elected in 1997 by a population weary of conflict, and was granted a divorce in 2006, while Taylor was living in exile in Nigeria with another woman.

Howard-Taylor’s political career began in earnest when she was elected in 2005 as a senator in Bong County, the nation’s third most populous county, and has since built an image as a resilient hard worker in Liberia’s male-dominated politics.  

‘The first thing I’ve done is to believe that I am able to make the changes I talk about,’ she told AFP in a recent interview.

‘I have made promises I have fulfilled in education, healthcare and infrastructure development, and so I hope over the past 12 years Jewel Howard has become her own person working for peace, working for prosperity and working for development,’ she added.

Howard-Taylor was a surprise pick for George Weah's running mate, as many expected her to run for the top job herself

Howard-Taylor was a surprise pick for George Weah’s running mate, as many expected her to run for the top job herself

Her NPP party agreed to form a coalition with Weah’s Congress for Democratic Change (CDC) in 2017, on the condition Howard-Taylor could run as vice-president.

No matter what she does to distance herself, Howard-Taylor’s proximity to Taylor remains a talking point, and in a nation where the ex-president is still revered by many, her presence seems to have been an asset for Weah.

The former AC Milan and Paris Saint-Germain football star won just 10.7 percent of the vote in Bong County when he stood for president in 2005, but in the first round of voting in 2017 his share of the vote shot up to 40.6 percent.

‘I think it’s unfair for people to assume that because she has kept the Taylor first name that she hasn’t built her own political empire,’ noted Liberian activist and scholar Robtel Neajai Pailey.

But some say she can never separate herself from her past alliances.

‘Her name is Jewel Howard-Taylor, so it has a very thin line between the separation as a first lady and a separation as a senator, for the fact that most people (here) still owe Charles Taylor so greatly,’ said Uriah Mitchell, head of programmes and production at Radio Gbarnga in Bong County’s capital.

Howard-Taylor has built an image as a resilient hard worker in Liberia's male-dominated politics

Howard-Taylor has built an image as a resilient hard worker in Liberia’s male-dominated politics

Taylor is currently serving a 50-year sentence for war crimes in a British prison, although he was convicted of funding rebel groups in Sierra Leone, not the recruitment of child soldiers, killings, rape and pillaging of which he is accused at home.

Questions remain over how much Howard-Taylor knew of her husband’s crimes, as she was studying and working abroad during his rebel years before he was elected president.

She is now estranged from Taylor, though she has admitted staying in contact with the father of her two children.

Howard-Taylor has also opposed war crime prosecutions in Liberia, which has never prosecuted rebel leaders from crimes committed during its back-to-back civil wars between 1989 and 2003.

His rival, Boakai, 73, is seen as a continuity candidate and has won praise for his years of public service and image as a corruption-free family man, while fending off allegations he failed to tackle poverty while in government. 

Weah topped the first round of voting with 38.4 percent while Boakai came second with 28.8 percent. That triggered a run-off as neither made it past the 50 percent needed to win outright.

‘I voted for George Weah because he is the one who will bring the change we have been waiting for in this country,’ declared supporter John Momoh after casting his ballot on Tuesday.

Victoria Blamoh, 56, told AFP she voted for Boakai’s ‘experience of leadership’, explaining: ‘He has been in government for 12 years, so he knows the ins and outs of it.’

Whoever wins the election faces an economy battered by lower commodity prices for its main exports of rubber and iron ore, and a rapidly depreciating currency.

Sirleaf guided the nation out of ruin following back-to-back 1989-2003 civil wars and through the horrors of the 2014-16 Ebola crisis, but is accused of failing to combat poverty and tackle corruption.

Living standards in Liberia remain among the worst in the world.

Milan's Liberian player George Weah holds up the Golden Ball award he recently received after the Italian league match between Milan and Sampdoria

Liberian presidential candidate and ex-football international George Weah

Weah played briefly in England for Chelsea and Manchester City and won the Ballon d’Or, won this year by Cristiano Ronaldo, in 1995 when he was with AC Milan

Weah is squaring up against vice president Joseph Boakai (pictured), with both men promising a break with a heritage of poverty and corruption in a country where most citizens have no reliable electricity or clean drinking water

Weah is squaring up against vice president Joseph Boakai (pictured), with both men promising a break with a heritage of poverty and corruption in a country where most citizens have no reliable electricity or clean drinking water

Weah has polled well in Bong county, the fiefdom of Liberian warlord and former president Charles Taylor and his ex-wife, Jewel Howard-Taylor, who is the former footballer’s vice-presidential pick, attracting controversy to his campaign.

Charles Taylor is serving a 50-year sentence in Britain for war crimes committed in neighbouring Sierra Leone, but his presence has loomed large over the election. 

As counting got under way, the candidates were urged to keep supporters calm to avoid the electoral violence that has hit Liberia in previous years.

Boakai has waged a bitter legal battle over problems with queue control and voter identification in the October 10 first round, and said he would accept the result provided the National Elections Commission (NEC) met ‘all of the standards’.

Polling stations on Tuesday displayed voter lists as a mark of transparency. The EU’s chief observer, Maria Arena, said staff were ‘better trained’ for the run-off.

Weah alleges that electoral fraud cost him the presidency in 2005 and the vice-presidency in 2011.

His CDC party contested those results but has refrained so far this time, though after voting on Tuesday Weah warned that ‘what happened in 2005 and 2011 cannot be repeated’. 

CHARLES TAYLOR: LIBERIA’S CANNIBAL WARLORD

George Weah has entered into a partnership with the ex-wife of former Liberian warlord Charles Taylor as he bids to become the country’s next president.

The arrangement has sparked controversy in a country where the wounds caused by the dictator are yet to fully heal.

Educated in America, and with a taste for Italian suits, Taylor was a billionaire with a fondness for the company of supermodels.

He is currently serving a 50-year sentence in a British prison for war crimes after being convicted of funding rebel groups in Sierra Leone during conflicts that left thousands dead or mutilated.

George Weah has entered into a partnership with the ex-wife of former Liberian warlord Charles Taylor (pictured) as he bids to become the country's next president

George Weah has entered into a partnership with the ex-wife of former Liberian warlord Charles Taylor (pictured) as he bids to become the country’s next president

During his war crimes trial in 2008, the court heard a close former aide testified that that he ordered his militias to eat the flesh of captured enemies and U.N. soldiers.

More than 250,000 people died in intertwined wars in Liberia and Sierra Leone. Prosecutors said Taylor wanted to plunder neighboring Sierra Leone’s diamonds and destabilise its government by controlling and arming rebels. 

He drew up plans – codenamed Operation No Living Thing – to slaughter the entire population of neighbouring Sierra Leone, enabling him to make billions from the country’s rich natural resources.

Helped by his American-born son ‘Chuckie’, he orchestrated the death of at tens of thousands, many of whom were tortured and raped. Others were cooked and eaten by his troops.

Dazzled by stories of his neighbouring country’s spectacular diamond finds, Taylor had fomented a bloody rebellion in Sierra Leone, sending men and weapons to help the plunder.

As a front, he used a proxy army called the Revolutionary United Front, a rag-tag collection of rebels and child soldiers recruited at gunpoint from rural areas. They were plied with ‘brown-brown’ – a mixture of heroin and gunpowder – so they could murder and rape without emotion.

Taylor (pictured) is currently serving a 50-year sentence for war crimes

Taylor (pictured) is currently serving a 50-year sentence for war crimes

In an orgy of terror, these drug-crazed fighters were ordered to hack off arms and legs with machetes, offering their victims the option of ‘short sleeves or long sleeves’ – a cut at the wrist, or the shoulder.

Sierra Leone became Africa’s new Heart Of Darkness and was reduced to ruin as forces backed by Taylor, some dressed in women’s clothes in the bizarre belief this would protect them from bullets, ran amok.

His child soldiers have told how they were forced to rape elderly women at gunpoint, and torture anyone suspected of collaborating with government forces.

The aim was to drive everyone away from the diamond fields, leaving Taylor’s forces in undisputed control of the mines. Thousands of women were kept as sex slaves by his marauders – after the tendons in their feet were slashed with machetes so they couldn’t flee.

Pregnant women had their stomachs hacked open and their unborn children killed in the womb.

As a member of the Poro Society, an ancient West African cult of demon-worshippers, Taylor believed that eating the organs of his enemies gave him their strength.

Born in a remote Liberian village in 1948, Taylor excelled at school and earned a university place in Boston. After gaining an economics degree in 1977, he returned home to take a government job in Liberia – only to flee back to the US in 1985 after embezzling more than £1million from state coffers.

But he was arrested on his arrival in America for crimes committed in Liberia and jailed pending trial.

His child soldiers have told how they were forced to rape elderly women at gunpoint, and torture anyone suspected of collaborating with government forces (file picture)

His child soldiers have told how they were forced to rape elderly women at gunpoint, and torture anyone suspected of collaborating with government forces (file picture)

Mysteriously, Taylor escaped a year later – reputedly with the help of the CIA – and was next spotted in Libya.

There, he underwent guerilla warfare training and – helped by his friend Muammar Gaddafi – he raised an army and fought his way back into Liberia, all while intervening in Sierra Leone.

When Liberia’s leader, Samuel Doe, was killed by a rival warlord in 1997, Taylor, whose forces already controlled vast swathes of territory, seized total control.

He installed his son as head of his secret police and began killing opponents and diverting state money to his private bank accounts.

‘Chuckie’, meanwhile, buried victims alive. He tortured others with red-hot irons and electric shocks. A favourite method was to drip hot oil into the eyes of prisoners.

Both Liberia and Sierra Leone descended into anarchy, forcing UN troops and Britain’s SAS to intervene. Taylor fled to Nigeria where he was later arrested and sent to the Hague in 2006.

Following his conviction, he was transferred to prison in Britain.

Today, Sierra Leone and Liberia are still struggling to recover from Taylor’s madness, with thousands maimed and mentally scarred by his atrocities.

What must they make of his argument – issued from his comfortable prison cell, via expensive lawyers, between three free meals a day – that his human rights are being violated?



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