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Subject:
From:
Momodou Camara <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 11 Aug 2003 17:11:45 -0500
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Defiant Taylor Bows Out in Liberia, Moses Blah Sworn In As Interim
Successor

allAfrica.com
NEWS
August 11, 2003
Posted to the web August 11, 2003

By Ofeibea Quist-Arcton
Johannesburg

Charles Taylor, the former Liberian rebel leader and recently indicted war
crimes suspect, stepped down as president of Liberia on Monday and handed
power to his vice president, Moses Blah.

In a ceremony in the capital, Monrovia, with three African heads of state
in attendance, Taylor told the assembled dignitaries "I leave you with
these parting words - God willing, I will be back".

President John Agyekum Kufuor of Ghana, the current chairman of the
Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas), announced that Blah
would himself hand over to a transitional government in October. "Today's
ceremony marks the end of an era in Liberia," Kufuor said. "It is our
expectation that today the war in Liberia has ended".

South Africa's President Thabo Mbeki, who also attended the ceremony in
Monrovia, said: "It is indeed a shameful thing that, as Africans, we have
killed ourselves for such a long time. It is indeed time that this war
should come to an end". South Africa will be contributing troops to the
African peacekeeping force that began deploying in Liberia last week, Mbeki
announced.

Mbeki, the outgoing chairman of the African Union, was accompanied to
Monrovia by the current AU chair, Mozambican President Joachim Chissano.
The Togolese prime minister, Koffi Sama, was also present in Monrovia for
the ceremony.

Dressed in a white safari suit, Taylor said he hoped the people of Liberia
would now enjoy peace in their country. "There are two things that I want
for the people of Liberia, one that they live, two that they see peace.
Today for me is a day of moving forward. We must put the past behind us".

The departing leader continued to depict himself as a "sacrificial lamb"
and "whipping boy" in his handover speech, which was replete with Bible
references and African proverbs. Speaking confidently of his time in
office, Taylor said "history will be kind to me. I have fulfilled my duties
in the interest of the Liberian people."

However, he leaves behind a legacy of violence, disorder and economic
collapse after almost 14 years of chaos - six years in power as an elected
president, following a seven-year civil war which he launched in late 1989.
He has also contributed to destabilising the region, fuelling wars across
his borders in at least three neighbouring countries, prompting his West
African counterparts and the United States government to put pressure on
him to resign, to allow Liberians to rebuild their shattered nation.

Taylor thanked Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo for his offer of asylum
and exile. Obasanjo was not among the leaders in Monrovia. He sent his
foreign minister, Olu Adeniji.

As he took office as Liberia's 22nd president in more than 150 years, Blah
pledged to "faithfully, conscientiously and impartially discharge the
duties and functions of the Republic of Liberia". Liberia's new leader
called on rebel factions to join negotiations with the government and end
the war. "You have no further excuse not to join the peace wagon," said
Blah.

Rebels had earlier rejected Taylor's choice of his long-term ally and
comrade-in-arms Blah as successor, insisting that a neutral candidate be
selected to oversee the transition to democratic elections in Liberia.

Liberia's new president said his country was ready to smoke the peace pipe
with Washington, with which Monrovia has had strained relations in recent
years. Taylor accused the United States of using economic blackmail to get
rid of him and warned other leaders that they could be next.




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