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Opinion

Liberia: Making Tourism A Key Sector In Liberia’s Development Drive

By Nathan N. Mulbah In an article published on January 26, 2026 in the New Liberia Newspaper special edition commemorating President Joseph N. Boakai third...

Liberia:Why I Believe the Speechwriters Got It Wrong About the National Planning Commission

By George K. Werner (former education minister) When President Joseph Nyuma Boakai presented his 2026 legislative agenda to a joint session of the Liberian Legislature,...

Liberia: Electricity Is a Paid Service, Not a Favor -In response to LEC’s press release

By George K. Werner (former education minister) I just read LEC’s brazen press release posted on its official Facebook page and feel compelled to respond—not...

Liberia: Exoneration Politics and the Weaponization of “No Culpability”: The LACRA Case Revisited

By Arthur G. G. Jarwleh, An Independent Political Analyst In Liberia’s contested governance space, few phrases are as politically potent—and as frequently abused—as “not culpable.”...

Liberia: Liberia’s Youngest Youth Minister: A Historic Moment – and a Systemic Test

By Wainright Acquoi Liberia’s Ministry of Youth and Sports will soon welcome—if confirmed by the Senate—its youngest ever Minister, Atty. Cornelia W. Kruah. This is...

Liberia: The Significance of the State of the Nation Address: A Liberian Perspective

Abstract The State of the Nation Address (SONA) is a constitutional and democratic tradition by which the Liberian president reports on the condition of the...

Liberia: Boakai at Midterm Reckoning SONA at Midway: Achievements Thin, Expectations Still Heavy

By Sherman C. Seequeh An overview Back on January 22, 2024, Joseph Nyuma Boakai was inaugurated President of the Republic of Liberia. It followed one of...

Liberia: If I Were Boakai, Applauses Would Not Amuse Me at SONA

By Sherman C. Seequeh This column is not new. During the administration of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, I wrote under the same refrain—If I were Ellen....

Liberia: What Peace Really Means: A Conversation Between Latin and Kru

By George K. Werner Peace is one of the most frequently spoken words in human history—and one of the least understood. We invoke it at...

Two of President Weah’s Education Legacy Policies and the Long Struggle for Educational Equity in Liberia

By George K. Werner (former education minister) The debate over President George Manneh Weah’s decision to pay the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE/WAEC)...

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