3 Important Things to watch for in President Weah’s first 100 days.

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3 Important Things to watch for in President Weah’s first 100 days.

Since 1944 Liberia as a nation saw a peaceful transfer of power between two democratically elected presidents.

The 2017 vote that brought President George M. Weah him to power which was also marked the first time the Liberian government ran its own election without the United Nations support.

Now, as Liberia move away from the Ellen Johnson Sirleaf era, there are four cardinal challenges that looms.

The election had problems. The third-place candidate, Charles Brumskine of the Liberty Party, alleged that the first round of voting on Oct. 10 was marred by widespread election fraud.

Liberia’s National Elections Commission (NEC) and the Supreme Court  heard the case and ruled that the results were fair. Even during this period, despite fears of election violence, nothing major broke out unlike during the 2011 election, when police killed at least one opposition party supporter.  The Liberian National Police worked at preventing violence this time around, and the Liberty Party accepted the court rulings. In the Dec. 26 runoff, Weah won 61.5 percent of the vote.

Additionally, there is a big question remains to be answer “there is  Will Weah’s vice president carry on Charles Taylor’s legacy?”

Charles Taylor, Liberia’s president from 1997 to 2003, was a war criminal — quite literally. In 2012, the U.N.-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone  sentenced him to 50 years in prison for  aiding and abetting War Crimes and crimes against humanity by supporting the rebels who tore apart Sierra Leone during its civil war.

But Taylor tore apart his country before backing the Sierra Leone fighters. As a rebel leader for the National Patriotic Front of Liberia, he helped oust President Samuel K. Doe in 1989.

After Former President Taylor  gained control of the entire country, he was formally elected president in the 1997 election. However, two groups rebelled against him: Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy and the Movement for Democracy in Liberia.

This insurgency eventually ousted him in 2003, by which time he had presided over the deaths of thousands of  people. Taylor has never been held accountable for these crimes, as there has been no special court for Liberia like the one for Sierra Leone.

Former President Taylor’s ex-wife Jewel Cianeh Howard Taylor is now vice president. The two met in the early 1980s, when Jewel was a first-year student at the University of Liberia, and had a son. They divorced in 2006 after he married another woman.

Former President Charles Taylor has been accused of meddling with the 2017 elections from his prison an allegation his family has since denied. Some Liberians wonder whether he will be pulling the strings with Jewel in power. It remains to be seen whether these claims prove to be no more than misogynistic assumptions. President George M. Weah, has since maintains that he has no contact with  Charles Taylor  via the vice president, but not everyone is comfortable  with another Taylor in a position of power. Actually, Liberia’s 2017 elections was a true test of democracy in Africa’s oldest Republic since experienced in 1944.

During the first 100 days, watch out for how many of Taylor’s old supporters are appointed to positions of power. Also watch for whether any movement for a special court for Liberia will be put on further hold.

Another important issue to look at is” How will Weah boost the economy?”

Finally, Liberia remains one of the poorest countries in the world, with nearly54 percent of its population living below the poverty line.

Liberia’s growth slowed dramatically after the Ebola epidemic, leading to a negative growth rate in 2016.

Inflation is on the rise, and the currency is depreciating against the dollar. Young people account for about 65 percent of Liberia’s population of 4.1 million, and youth unemployment is estimated to be as high as 85 percent.

Many of President Weah’s supporters are from among the young and unemployed and they will be closely watching his plans and actions on boosting the economy. It is a good sign that he mentioned these priorities in his inauguration address, stressing the importance of infrastructure and seeking foreign direct investments. He has 93 days left to turn those words into some action.

 Sabrina Karim, brought you this prospective. Sabrima Karim is an assistant professor in the government department of Cornell University and has been conducting research in Liberia since 2012.

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