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         Liberia Government:     more books (100)
  1. Liberia: The year of the revolution by Bill Frank, 1972
  2. Special inauguration issue on life and work of President W.R. Tolbert, Jr., 19th president of Liberia by William R Tolbert, 1976
  3. Liberia in the new partition of West Africa, by George W Ellis, 1919
  4. Class Ethnicity and Politics in Liberia by Stephen S. Hlophe, 1979-03-13
  5. Address to the nation: Interim national assembly on the state of the nation : Unity Conference Center, Monrovia, Liberia, December 11, 1985 by Samuel K Doe, 1985
  6. Bibliography of Liberian government documents by Svend E Holsoe, 1968
  7. Assistance of the League of Nations to be given to the Republic of Liberia: Verbatim records of the meetingof the committee of the council of the League of Nations, held in London by Antoine Sottile, 1931
  8. The three needs of Liberia: A lecture delivered at Lower Buchanan, Grand Bassa County, Liberia, January 26, 1908 by Edward Wilmot Blyden, 1908
  9. Liberia's eighteenth president by J. Emery Knight, 1946
  10. Transport and communications in Liberia by Harvey Klemmer, 1964
  11. Sixth annual message of Dr. William R. Tolbert, Jr., president of the Republic of Liberia, to the second session of the 48th legislature, January 28, 1977 by William R Tolbert, 1977
  12. Seventh annual message of Dr. William R. Tolbert, Jr., President of the Republic of Liberia, to the third session of the forty-eighth legislature at the Capitol, January 31, 1978, Monrovia, Liberia by William R Tolbert, 1978
  13. The republic of Liberia: Being a general description of the Negro republic, with its history, commerce, agriculture, flora, fauna, and present methods of administration by R. C. F Maugham, 1920
  14. Democracy, the call of the Liberian people: (the struggle for economic progress and social justice in Liberia during the 1970s) by Togbah-Nah Tipoteh, 1981

81. U.S. Committee For Refugees: Repatriation And Reintegration In Liberia, Summary
American ambassador should pointedly reach out to all sectors of society, includingthose few departments in liberia s national and local government that make
http://www.refugees.org/news/crisis/liberia/intro.htm
Repatriation and Reintegration in Liberia
Summary of Recommendations USCR Site Visit to Liberia, Guinea, Cote d'Ivoire (October 1999)
More Info Country Reports for Liberia News October 19, 2000 - Threat of Widening War in West Africa; 400,000 Refugees in Guinea Are Vulnerable
Nov 1999: Findings and Recommendations
Nov 1999: Future Unknown: Liberians Face Fragile Transition to Peace ... State Department Scales Back Family-Based Refugee Processing for Africans Background Liberia Country Report
A. Security Conditions
  • Liberian government leaders, including the President, should conduct regular visits to upper Lofa county to discipline government soldiers and help resolve continued population displacement.
  • The UN Special Representative in Liberia should work with the Liberian government to facilitate regular UN assessment trips to upper Lofa county to monitor humanitarian and human rights conditions there. The UN should support similar assessments by local NGOs and human rights organizations.
  • International aid agencies in Liberia should maintain updated evacuation plans.
  • The international community should provide financial or logistical support to facilitate regular reporting by local journalists and human rights groups on events in rural counties.
  • 82. WoYaa Search Engine - Africa References Online - COUNTRIES/LIBERIA/GOVERNMENT
    Browse the Web categories COUNTRIES/liberia/government - brought toyou by WoYaa! Africa Directory. Welcome to WoYaa!
    http://www.woyaaonline.com/links/COUNTRIES/LIBERIA/GOVERNMENT/
    Welcome to WoYaa! Your premier African search engine and Web sites directory since 1997. African Web Sites By Country Algeria Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Cape Verde CAR Chad Comoros Congo Djibouti Egypt EQ. Guinea Eritrea Ethiopia Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea Bissau Kenya Lesotho Liberia Libya Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mauritius Morocco Mozambique Namibia Niger Nigeria RD Congo Rwanda Sao Tome Senegal Seychelles Siserra Leone Somalia South Africa Sudan Swaziland Tanzania Togo Tunisia Uganda W. Sahara Zambia Zimbabwe Forums POLITICS
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    • Country profiles : Liberia
      European Union (EU) - Africa-Carribe-Pacific (ACP) : Bilateral and developpement cooperation relations Cool (Added: Mon Sep 18 2000 Hits: 177 Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0) Rate It
    • Dozens killed by rebels in northwestern Liberia
      Dozens killed by rebels in northwestern Liberia Dozens killed by rebels in northwestern Liberia. EST) Dozens of people have been killed during six days of fighting that has terrorized the northwestern Liberian countryside, military officials said Cool (Added: Mon Sep 18 2000 Hits: 114 Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)

    83. Liberian Conflict References
    Press Statement by John W. Blaney III To liberian Press March 20, 2003 First, onthe war, the Contact Group is urging both the government of liberia and the
    http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/liberia-refs.htm
    Home Military World World at War ... Liberian Insurgency
    Liberian Conflict References
    Delights from the Garden Of Eden
    A Cookbook and a History
    of the Iraqi Cuisine

    84. History Of Liberia A Time Line
    by Samuel K. Doe, a liberian of nonAmerican descent, assassinated President Tolbertand overthrew the government that had held sway over liberia since 1847.
    http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/gmdhtml/libhtml/liberia.html
    History Of Liberia: A Time Line
    After the struggle for liberty in the American Revolution, free and enslaved African Americans faced continued hardship and inequality. A number of white Americans, for a variety of reasons, joined them in their efforts to resolve this complex problem. One possible solution (advocated at a time when the assimilation of free blacks into American society seemed out of the question) was the complete separation of white and black Americans. Some voices called for the return of African Americans to the land of their forebears.
    1815-1817 Black Colonization
    - African-American Quaker and maritime entrepreneur Paul Cuffee (or Cuffe) financed and captained a successful voyage to Sierra Leone where he helped a small group of African-American immigrants establish themselves. Cuffee believed that African Americans could more easily "rise to be a people" in Africa than in America with its system of slavery and its legislated limits on black freedom. Cuffee also envisioned a black trade network organized by Westernized blacks who would return to Africa to develop its resources while educating its people in the skills they had gained during captivity. Cuffee died in 1817 without fully realizing his dream. - The partial success of Paul Cuffee's African venture encouraged white proponents of colonization to form an organization to repatriate those free African Americans who would volunteer to settle in Africa. Prominent Americans such as Henry Clay, John Randolph of Roanoke, and Justice Bushrod Washington were members of the American Colonization Society (ACS) during its early years. Many free African-Americans, however, including those who had supported Paul Cuffee's efforts, were wary of this new organization. They were concerned that it was dominated by Southerners and slave holders and that it excluded blacks from membership. Most free African-Americans wanted to stay in the land they had helped to build. They planned to continue the struggle for equality and justice in the new nation. See African-American Mosaic:

    85. Africaservice Directory Listing / Regional / Countries / Liberia / Government
    Site Info. Suggest New Link. User(s) Online 1. Home Regional Countries liberia government. SubCategories Local government Council (0), States (0). Town (0),
    http://www.africaservice.com/afrolinks/view.php?cid=956

    86. Liberia (10/03)
    The government of liberia has reported in recent years that it has discoveredsizable deposits of crude oil along its Atlantic Coast.
    http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/6618.htm
    [Print Friendly Version]
    Bureau of African Affairs
    October 2003
    Background Note: Liberia

    PROFILE OFFICIAL NAME:
    Republic of Liberia
    Geography
    Area: 111,369 sq. km. (43,000 sq. mi.). Slightly larger than Ohio.
    Cities: Capital Monrovia (est. 750,000). Principal towns Buchanan (est. 300,000), Ganta (est. 290,000), Gbarnga (est. 150,000), Kakata (est. 100,000), Harbel (est. 136,000).
    Terrain: Three areas Mangrove swamps and beaches along the coast, wooded hills and semideciduous shrublands along the immediate interior, and dense tropical forests and plateaus in the interior. Liberia has 40% of West Africa's rain forest. People
    Nationality: Noun and adjective Liberian(s).
    Population (2001 est.): 3,239,000. Annual growth rate (2001 est.): 3.1%. Ethnic groups: Kpelle 20%, Bassa 16%, Gio 8%, Kru 7%, 49% spread over 12 other ethnic groups. Religions: Christian 30%, Muslim 10%, animist 60%. Languages: English is the official language. There are 16 indigenous languages. Education: Literacy Health: Life expectancy 51.4 years.

    87. Web Directory: Regional/Africa/Liberia/Government
    Internet Resources on government in Regional/Africa/liberia/government. Yourare here Web Directory Regional/Africa/liberia/government.
    http://web.politinfo.com/dir/Regional/Africa/Liberia/Government/
    the entire directory only in Government
    Web Directory
    Regional Africa Liberia : Government Web Directory offers listings of web sites, site previews, plus links to detailed information such as traffic rankings, user reviews and related sites. Get the Free Alexa Toolbar Categories Embassies and Consulates
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    88. Web Directory: Regional/Africa/Liberia/Government/Embassies And Consulates
    Internet Resources on Embassies and Consulates in Regional/Africa/liberia/government/Embassiesand Consulates. Includes site previews
    http://web.politinfo.com/dir/Regional/Africa/Liberia/Government/Embassies_and_Co
    the entire directory only in Embassies and Consulates
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    Regional Africa Liberia ... Government : Embassies and Consulates Web Directory offers listings of web sites, site previews, plus links to detailed information such as traffic rankings, user reviews and related sites. Get the Free Alexa Toolbar Categories Abroad
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    89. Land Economy Of Liberia
    By 1906 the Liberian government was literally bankrupt. In 1911, the Liberiagovernment turned to the United States for a foreign loan.
    http://pages.prodigy.net/jkess3/Land.html
    The animated picture above is the downstream of the St. John River falls. At the bottom is the heart of the falls. The falls is located in Bong County, about 125 miles northeast of Monrovia, the capital.
    When Dr. Wlimot Blyden, a Liberian scholar and diplomat visited Bopulu, he said " The view in the distance, two or three miles northeast and southeast of Bopulu, is bounded by beautiful hills. The surrounding scenery is picturesque beyond our power to describe, resembling, in the hills by which the town is environed, the scenery about Jerusalem, with the exception that here the hills are covered with a rich and luxuriant verdure, as if fresh from the hands of their Maker, indicating fertility and abundance...".
    Highway Leading Toward the Interior of Liberia.
    Travelling back to the Atlantic coast are the Mano River, the Lofa River, St. Paul River, Farmington River,St John's River, Cestos River, Sanguin River, Dugbe River, Grand Cess River, and Cavalla River, all of which transport tons of natural debris into the Atlantic Ocean. Some of the rivers are navigable at some locations, as they reach the coast; others are not. Out in the southwest, in Grand Cape Mount County, is beautiful Lake Piso, which has an area of about 40 square miles.
    Stretching through the length and breath of Liberia is the preponderance of ponds, brooks, creeks, and streams. While this massive pool of water assist the vegetation and provides fertility for the land, it creates extensive flooding during the raining season. As a child growing up in Voinjama, the capital of Lofa County, I recollect that travelling was especially difficult during the raining season. Streams, brooks, and creeks, that were easily passable on foot, overflew their banks, and made transportation almost impossible. The economic life of the people in the interior almost came to a standstill, because of this massive flooding. I recalled on several occasions, when we could not visit my maternal grandfather, who lived about 30 miles southeast of Voinjama, because the roads were flooded.

    90. Global Connections . Liberia . U.S. Policy | PBS
    (148) Watch, Many liberians and Americans alike in liberia wereoutraged by the US government s continued support for Doe. The US
    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/globalconnections/liberia/essays/uspolicy/
    Liberian president Samuel K. Doe meets with Ronald Reagan. Ronald Reagan Library Liberia is born
    In the early 1800s, as the United States debated the status and rights of its Black population, the government made its first stand with regard to Liberia (known at the time as the Grain Coast): Congress would help provide funding to send freeborn Blacks and emancipated slaves there to establish a colony
    The idea of repatriating Blacks from America to West Africa was a controversial one. Among African Americans themselves, opinion was divided. Some felt they should stay and fight for equality and freedom in America. Others were encouraged by the promise of their own land, but were suspicious of the motives of the American Colonization Society (ACS) for sending them to Africa. Quaker members of the ACS felt that African Americans would have a much better chance at liberty in a country of their own than they would in America. Slaveholder members of the ACS agreed with the principle of sending Blacks to Africa, but theirs was a more selfish, and racist, reason: They wanted to rid America of any free Blacks who might help organize a slave rebellion.
    And so in 1822 the first Black, American settlers crossed the ocean and arrived on the Grain Coast, their voyage the first thread of a complex web that would link Liberia to America over many decades. The settlement was named Monrovia, after U.S. president James Monroe, and the colony became Liberia. Over the next 40 years, 19,000 African Americans, Africans recaptured from slave ships, and a small number of West Indians, would settle in Liberia.

    91. Peace Radio: Liberia
    On 3 November 2003, following the fall of Taylor’s government, liberia stransitional government lifted a ban on Star Radio. President
    http://www.rnw.nl/realradio/dossiers/html/liberia-p.html
    Bahasa Indonesia Nederlands English Español Português Media Network dossiers:
    In this dossier:
    Hate Radio
    Peace Radio
    This page last updated: Thursday, January 08, 2004 Star Radio [Programme producer/Broadcaster] was set up and managed by Fondation Hirondelle (Swallow Foundation), a Swiss-based non-governmental organisation, in partnership with Radio Monrovia (a private FM station). It was funded by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), the Swedish International Development Agency (SIDA) and the Netherlands Development Agency (NEDA). Its estimated cost for 2000 was set at $600,000. It was set up with the aim of providing Liberians with impartial news and information and began broadcasting, initially on FM only, on 15 July 1997. Shortwave broadcasts were added in September 1997. The project aimed at making Star Radio a fully independent and autonomous station by 2004 following an "emergency phase" (May 1997-December 1998) and a "consolidation phase" (January 1999 - 2003). Star Radio was closed down by the Liberian Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications between 7 January and 6 February 1997 due to an alleged illegal allocation of broadcast frequencies. The Liberian government withdrew the station's shortwave frequencies in October 1998, and restated its refusal to grant Star Radio a shortwave licence in February 2000.

    92. Traveljournals.net - Government Of Liberia
    Country name conventional long form Republic of liberia conventionalshort form liberia. government type republic. Capital Monrovia.
    http://www.traveljournals.net/explore/liberia/government.html
    Home Explore Pictures Stories ... Accommodation Search: Navigation: Home Explore Liberia / Government Government of Liberia Locations: A B C D ... Search Country name: conventional long form:  Republic of Liberia
    conventional short form:  Liberia Government type: republic Capital: Monrovia Administrative divisions: 13 counties; Bomi, Bong, Grand Bassa, Grand Cape Mount, Grand Gedeh, Grand Kru, Lofa, Margibi, Maryland, Montserrado, Nimba, River Cess, Sinoe Independence: 26 July 1847 National holiday: Independence Day, 26 July (1847) Constitution: 6 January 1986 Legal system: dual system of statutory law based on Anglo-American common law for the modern sector and customary law based on unwritten tribal practices for indigenous sector Suffrage: 18 years of age; universal Executive branch: chief of state:  President Charles Ghankay TAYLOR (since 2 August 1997); note - the president is both the chief of state and head of government
    head of government:  President Charles Ghankay TAYLOR (since 2 August 1997); note - the president is both the chief of state and head of government
    cabinet:  Cabinet appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate
    elections:  president elected by popular vote for a six-year term (renewable); election last held 19 July 1997 (next to be held NA July 2003)

    93. BBC NEWS | World | Africa | Country Profiles | Timeline: Liberia
    Taylor s uprising. 1989 National Patriotic Front of liberia (NPFL)led by Charles Taylor begins an uprising against the government.
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/country_profiles/1043567.stm
    Home
    TV

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    Last Updated: Tuesday, 1 June, 2004, 15:24 GMT 16:24 UK E-mail this to a friend Printable version Timeline: Liberia
    A chronology of key events:
    - Constitution modelled on that of the USA drawn up. July - Liberia becomes independent. MONROVIA Founded 1822 as haven for freed slaves from Americas Named after US President James Monroe Population: 543,000 (2002) - Liberia declares war on Germany, giving the Allies a base in West Africa. - Firestone Tyre and Rubber Company opens rubber plantation on land granted by government. Rubber production becomes backbone of economy. - Forced-labour practices abolished. - William Tubman elected president. - Government declares war on the Axis powers. May - Women and indigenous property owners vote in the presidential election for the first time. - Racial discrimination outlawed. - Tubman dies and is succeeded by William Tolbert Jr. INDEPENDENCE [Providence] will miraculously make Liberia a paradise...

    94. EUROPA - Development - Countries - Liberia
    Following the rebels’ advance in 2003 and under pressure from the internationalcommunity the government of liberia agreed to come to the negotiation table.
    http://europa.eu.int/comm/development/body/country/country_home_en.cfm?cid=lr&ln

    95. Amnesty International - Library - Liberia: Attacks On Media Continue With The Ar
    Republic of Guinea. The liberian government has accused the US and UKgovernments of plotting to destabilise liberia. An arrest warrant
    http://web.amnesty.org/ai.nsf/Index/AFR340022000?OpenDocument&of=COUNTRIES\LIBER

    96. Amnesty International - Library - Liberia: War In Lofa County Does Not Justify K
    Lofa County in July 2000 and pending further UN sanctions on liberia, currentlyunder discussion internal repression and intolerance by the government of any
    http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGAFR340042001?open&of=ENG-2F5

    97. BUBL LINK / 5:15 Internet Resources: Liberia
    Listing of political resources relevant to liberia, with links to parties, organisations,government, media and results of recent elections, where available.
    http://bubl.ac.uk/link/l/liberia.htm
    BUBL LINK / 5:15 Catalogue of Internet Resources Home Search Subject Menus A-Z ... About
    Liberia
    A-Z Index Titles Descriptions
  • African American Mosaic
  • CIA World Factbook 2000: Liberia
  • Ethnologue Language Database: Liberia
  • INCORE Guide to Internet Sources on Conflict and Ethnicity in Liberia ...
  • World Travel Guide: Liberia Page last updated: 17 March 2003 Comments: bubl@bubl.ac.uk
    African American Mosaic
    Exhibition containing introductory and in-depth information about the history and culture of black Americans. It includes sections on colonisation, the abolition of slavery, and migration with images and photographs.
    Author: Library of Congress
    Subjects: african americans, liberia, slavery
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    documents, museum, images
    Location: usa
    Last checked:
    CIA World Factbook 2000: Liberia
    Basic reference information about Liberia, including details of geography, people, economy, government, communications, transportation, military and transnational issues. Geographical information includes area, population, flag, maps, high and low points, co-ordinates, boundary length, border countries, climate, land use and natural resources.
    Author: CIA
    Subjects: liberia
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    document Location: usa Last checked:
    Ethnologue Language Database: Liberia
    A catalogue of all the languages and dialects spoken in Liberia, with details of the numbers of speakers of each language. Also some demographic data such as rates of literacy, blindness and deafness.
  • 98. Liberia Excluded From Canadian Government Debt Relief
    liberia Excluded from Canadian government Debt Relief. By Geepu NahTiepoh Jan 8, 2001. Last month the Canadian federal government
    http://www.theperspective.org/debtrelief.html
    Liberia Excluded from Canadian Government Debt Relief By Geepu Nah Tiepoh
    Jan 8, 2001 Last month the Canadian federal government, through Finance Minister Paul Martin, announced a moratorium on debt payments from all heavily indebted poor countries (HIPCs) owing Canada. The minister was delivering on an initiative he launched during meetings of the World Bank and IMF in Prague last September, at which he publicly requested that all creditor governments suspend debt interest payments from poor countries. Federal sources say the initiative "will let most of Canada's poorest debtors off the hook for interest payments until the IMF, World Bank and creditor countries work out a permanent plan to forgive the countries' debts completely", according to the Globe and Mail (December 19, 2000). Canada is currently owed about $1.1 billion by 17 of the 41 countries classified as HIPCs by the World Bank and IMF. The seventeen are Benin, Bolivia, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guyana, Honduras, Madagascar, Senegal, Tanzania, Zambia, Congo, Ivory Coast, Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia, Rwanda, and Sudan. Eleven of these countries, with a total debt amounting to some $700 million, immediately begin benefiting from the moratorium as of January 1, this year. However, the remaining six countries, including the Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia, Sudan, Congo, Rwanda, and the Ivory Coast, will not qualify until they are "fully committed to the principles of peaceful development and good governance, including the protection of human rights".

    99. Ambassador Cunningham Statement In The Security Council On
    suffering of the people in liberia and Sierra Leone. My delegation believes thatcontinued targeted sanctions against the Taylor government promote progress in
    http://www.un.int/usa/01_158.htm
    Ambassador James B. Cunningham
    Deputy United States Representative to the United Nations
    Statement in the Security Council on the Situation in Liberia
    November 5, 2001
    USUN PRESS RELEASE # 158 (01)
    November 5, 2001
    Statement by Ambassador James B. Cunningham, United States Deputy Permanent Representative to the United Nations, on the Situation in Liberia, in the Security Council, November 5, 2001 Thank you, Madam President. I would like also to welcome you to the Chair and to welcome the Liberian Foreign Minister here today. I also want to commend Ambassador Ayafor and his team for presenting us with one of the most comprehensive and useful reports we have seen in the Council. They deserve our respect not only for the thoroughness of their work but for their honesty and integrity, particularly in the face of several attempts by government officials in the region to influence the outcome of the report. The methodology of the report is highly professional and sound, with good analysis, and the five detailed case studies are especially informative. In March of this year, the Security Council adopted

    100. Lib001 Taylor's Liberia Becoming Pariah Nation
    The American UN Ambassador, Richard Holbrooke, maintains that there is overwhelmingevidence that the government of liberia is actively supporting the RUF
    http://www.afrol.com/News2001/lib001_un_sanctions.htm

    Liberia
    Taylor's Liberia becoming pariah nation Related items News articles
    26.06.2001 - Pressure on Taylor's Liberia remains high
    05.05.2001 - UN sanctions against Liberia to take effect on Monday

    02.05.2001 - Taylor's Liberia remains focus of critics

    24.03.2001 - Liberia slips further into repression
    ...
    12.09.2000 - Annan addresses dangerous situation on Guinean border
    Pages
    Liberia Archive

    Guinea Archive

    Guinea Index Page
    Sierra Leone Page ... News Documents The role of Liberia's logging industry on national and regional insecurity Background The Civil War in Sierra Leone In Internet UNHCR IRIN - Liberia afrol.com, 20 January - Following Liberia's continued support to the Sierra Leonean RUF terrorists and attacks destabilising Guinea, the UN is now considering to impose trade and travel embargos on the country. Charles Taylor, President of Liberia, has been partly responsible for armed conflicts and economic criminality in the region for over a decade. On Thursday, the US proposed a resolution in the United Nations Security Council that could ban Liberia's diamond and timber exports and stop international flights into the country. The draft resolution refers to an earlier conclusion by the Security Council that "the bulk of RUF diamonds leave Sierra Leone through Liberia, and that such illicit trade cannot be conducted without the permission and involvement of Liberian government officials at the highest levels, including President Charles Taylor."

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