151 Liberia’s central bank confirmed
Thursday it has appointed the son of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf as interim
governor despite his previous suspension from the institution for failing to
properly declare his assets.
Charles Sirleaf was deputy governor of the bank
until his promotion to interim governor on Wednesday, but in 2012 was
temporarily suspended on his mother’s orders for breaching declaration rules.
The bank confirmed the appointment to AFP on Thursday but would not comment
further.
His appointment
has raised fresh allegations of nepotism against Sirleaf following the
short-lived appointment of another son, Robert Sirleaf, to the National Oil
Company of Liberia. Robert Sirleaf was forced to resign in 2013 after
attracting heavy criticism, and went on unsuccessfully contest a Senate seat in
2014.
The outgoing governor of the central Bank of Liberia, Mill Jones,
resigned his post two weeks ago to enable him to stand for the presidential
elections due to take place in 2017.
Jefferson Knight, head of human rights
monitoring at the influential United Methodist church in Liberia, told AFP he
believed Charles Sirleaf was appointed primarily due to his name.
“There are so
many Liberians who are qualified for that post, why it is only he who will be
elected? This is nepotism,” he said.
“I am sure the president is testing the
water and I hope she will do the right thing by appointing another person.
Though we don’t know for how long her son will remain as interim head, this is
not smelling good,” Knight added.
“Liberians spoke against it until Robert
resigned. That will also be the case with Charles Sirleaf’s appointment.”
Ordinary Liberians were also quick to express their anger Thursday.
“This is
the same nepotism Leymah Gbowee was referring to when she resigned her post
from the government,” said Patrick Tokpah, an educator. Gbowee, a Nobel Laureate
like Sirleaf, resigned as head of Liberia’s reconciliation commission in 2012
accusing President Sirleaf of failing to fight graft.
In a 2013 Transparency
International survey, 96 percent of respondents said they felt that Liberia’s
lawmakers were corrupt or extremely corrupt, and 77 percent reported paying a
police bribe in the last year.
Culled from Vanguard
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