Yahoo – AFP,
Philippe SIUBERSKI, December 30, 2017
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| Supporters of George Weah celebrate after final results in Liberia's presidential election confirmed his as winner (AFP Photo/SEYLLOU) |
Monrovia
(AFP) - Liberia's president-elect George Weah vowed Saturday to "improve
people's lives" after the former star footballer secured a stunning
run-off victory in the country's first democratic transfer of power in decades.
Idolised in
Liberia as "Mister George", Weah is to be sworn in on January 22,
replacing Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who in 2006 took the helm of the West African
country first founded for freed US slaves.
The
electoral board confirmed Weah's run-off victory on Friday evening, as his
rival, Vice President Joseph Boakai, conceded defeat.
In his
first public comments since his victory, Weah told journalists in Monrovia he
aimed to "improve the lives" of Liberians.
"I
declare publicly today that transforming the lives of all Liberians is a
singular mission," he said.
A victory
speech was however postponed after crowds of energetic supporters gathered
around a podium for Weah's address grew too boisterous, an AFP correspondent
said.
Weah, 51,
who starred in top-flight football at Paris Saint-Germain and AC Milan in the
1990s and briefly at Chelsea and Manchester City before entering politics in
2002, won 61.5 percent of the ballot, taking 14 of Liberia's 15 counties.
Boakai said
he had called Weah to congratulate him and appealed for unity, saying: "My
love for the country is far (more) profound than my desire for the
presidency."
The White
House called the vote "a major milestone for Liberia's democracy"
while UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres applauded "all Liberians for
the successful completion of the elections process, which was conducted in a
peaceful environment".
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Former
international football star and Liberia's president-elect George Weah told
reporters he would aim to 'build on the gains' of his predecessor Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf (AFP Photo/Zoom DOSSO)
|
'Don't
forget your roots'
The
tumultuous events of the past 70 years in Liberia, where an estimated 250,000
people died during back-to-back civil wars between 1989-2003, have prevented a
democratic handover from taking place since 1944.
Sirleaf's
predecessor Charles Taylor fled the country in 2003, hoping to avoid
prosecution for funding rebel groups in neighbouring Sierra Leone. Two
presidents who served prior to Taylor were assassinated.
The Sirleaf
administration guided the nation out of the ruins of war and through the
horrors of the 2014-16 Ebola crisis, but is accused of failing to combat
poverty and corruption.
Weah said
he would aim to "build on the institutional gains made under Madame
Sirleaf".
His former
club Paris Saint-Germain tweeted its congratulations to the "world
football legend on the latest chapter of his brilliant career!!!" while
former Chelsea star Didier Drogba, Manchester City midfielder Yaya Toure and
Marseille's former Cameroon midfielder Stephane Mbia also sent their best
wishes.
Weah, who
grew up in grinding poverty, is already facing pressure to improve the lives of
millions of Liberians.
"I
think the Liberian people will expect... Weah's presidency to (have a)
pro-poor, pro-growth policy that will put the people at the centre of national
development," said political analyst Vita Ishmael Tue.
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| Profile of George Weah who won the Liberian election (AFP Photo/ Paul DEFOSSEUX) |
He added
that he expected Weah's presidency to see power "given to the people; the
provision of education, youth training for disadvantaged and vulnerable youths
that are on the streets and who see themselves in him".
Clinton
Taryor from Weah's CDC party urged the new leader: "Mr. President, don't
forget your roots. We are not behind you because you're handsome or because you
are a star.... Some of us are behind you because we know that you walked in our
shoes."
Weah, the
only African ever to have won both FIFA's World Player of the Year and the
coveted Ballon D'Or, missed out on the presidency in a 2005 bid.
His latest
campaign was not without controversy, however.
He has
drawn some criticism for picking Jewel Howard-Taylor, the powerful ex-wife of
former warlord and president Charles Taylor, as his vice-president. Taylor is
serving a 50-year sentence in a British jail for war crimes.
Weah also
had the backing of a notorious former warlord Prince Johnson, who sipped a beer
as his men tortured former president Samuel Kanyon Doe to death.
Liberia's Ellen Sirleaf: a women's icon with nerves of steel who made history in 2005 when she became Africa's first elected female president https://t.co/kV5HusXMUw pic.twitter.com/KLUovkLajE— AFP news agency (@AFP) December 30, 2017



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