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View Full Version : Taylor Gives Farewell Address in Liberia - Taylor Blasts U.S



Seraphim
08-10-2003, 02:36 PM
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=514&e=2&u=/ap/20030810/ap_on_re_af/liberia_030809185953

http://us.news2.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20030809/capt.1060459432.liberia_dkb108.jpg

Liberian President Charles Taylor waves to supporters after leaving a meeting where he bid farewell to party supporters at the party headquarters in the Liberian capital Monrovia, Saturday, Aug 9, 2003. Taylor is due to officially hand over power to his current Vice-President Moses Blah on Monday. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)


By GLENN McKENZIE, Associated Press Writer

In a farewell address to his wartorn nation, President Charles Taylor declared Sunday he would "sacrifice my presidency' to stop bloodshed in Liberia (news - web sites).


Taylor, sitting solemnly with folded hands, recorded the address before a Liberian flag at his home. The Associated Press obtained a copy of the recording before its broadcast to the nation, expected later Sunday.


"I love this country very much," Taylor said. "This is why I have decided to sacrifice my presidency. As I look at people dying, I must stop fighting.


The statement marked Taylor's first formal word to Liberia's people that he was quitting power, in a resignation ceremony due Monday.


"I stop now, because above all else, you the people count," Taylor said.


Taylor also accused America of forcing his departure. The United States and West African nations have demanded Taylor cede power in a bid to end 14 years of conflict ushered in by Taylor.


Few in Taylor's cut-off capital, under siege by rebels for two months, would be able to hear the address — with batteries, fuel for generators and all else, especially food, scarce on the government-held side of Monrovia.


Late Saturday, Vice President Moses Blah told the AP that Taylor would make good on his pledge to turn over power at a ceremony Monday. Taylor has pledged to cede power and go into exile but has backed off similar promises.


"President Taylor is relinquishing power for the sake of peace," Blah said. "Taylor is surely leaving; he's leaving the country in my hands."


Blah appealed to rebels besieging the capital Monrovia to stop fighting and help restore order. The rebels vehemently oppose Blah's succession, demanding that a neutral figure be appointed to preside over a transition government.


"I am telling my brothers out there ... lay down your arms, leave the bushes and come let's build the country," Blah said.


Rebels remained skeptical of any promises from Taylor's administration.


"Until Taylor resigns, I won't believe it. He is a criminal," said a rebel civilian official, A.L. Hadjia Sekou Fofana. Fofana allowed that if Taylor indeed fulfills his vow to cede power, "it will be a step in the right direction."


Fofana renewed rebel pledges to give up the city's port to a West African peacekeeping force when it has sufficient strength to hold the harbor from Taylor's fighters. The peace force had 687 troops on the ground in Liberia on its way to a promised 3,250-member deployment.


American and West African military officers ventured into Monrovia's rebel-held port for the first time on Saturday since the two-month siege began. They found aid warehouses looted and corpses floating by the docks.


The U.S. and West African officers negotiated with the rebels for days to gain access to the port. The access is crucial to opening humanitarian lines for Liberia's capital — especially for the government side, where tens of thousands of civilians have little to eat but leaves.


Kabineh Ja'Neh, a top rebel official at off-and-on peace talks in Ghana, said he favored a humanitarian corridor "in principle." He stressed rebels had yet to make a formal decision.





Rebel fighters clutching rocket launchers and taped-up assault rifles escorted the West African troops, three U.S. Marines, and a U.S. Embassy military attache, Army Col. Sue Ann Sandusky, through the port to view damage from the rebel sieges.

The West Africans and U.S. Marines surveyed shelled, charred piers looking for docking for aid ships to deliver food to the capital. Discolored bodies floated next to upended, rusted ships.

The peacekeepers' presence and Taylor's promise to resign have helped bring a weak truce to Monrovia, though fighting persists in the countryside.

As the clock ticked on Taylor's regime, his spokesman Vaanii Passawe warned that government fighters might cause chaos when he leaves. "Our morale has been sapped," he said Saturday.

"The situation is likely to collapse unless some pressure is put to bear" on the rebels, Passawe said. "Once the president leaves, our boys might be stigmatized. If that is the case, you must expect chaos. Hell might just break loose."

Taylor, a former warlord blamed for 14 years of conflict here, has pledged to go into exile in Nigeria some unspecified time after he resigns.

Scrim
08-10-2003, 02:43 PM
Good riddance(thanks alot Carter). Lets see what happens now. Im not holding my breath though.

Seraphim
08-10-2003, 09:37 PM
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20030811/ap_on_re_af/liberia&cid=515&ncid=716


Taylor Blasts U.S. in Farewell Address

By GLENN McKENZIE

MONROVIA, Liberia - President Charles Taylor delivered a farewell address Sunday to a nation bloodied by 14 years of war, declaring himself "the sacrificial lamb" to end what he said was a U.S.-backed rebel war against his besieged regime.




Taylor, sitting solemnly with folded hands, recorded the address in front of a Liberian flag at his home, for broadcast on the evening before he was to hand power to Vice President Moses Blah at one minute before noon (7:59 a.m. EDT) on Monday.


"I do not stop out of fear. I do not stop out of fright. I stop out of love for you, my people," Taylor declared, adding, "I fought for you."


He accused the United States of arming Liberia (news - web sites)'s rebels, calling it an "American war" and suggesting it was motivated by U.S. eagerness for Liberia's gold, diamonds and other reserves.


In Washington, a senior Bush administration official said he wasn't aware of a claim by Taylor about the United States and the rebels in Liberia, but that it would be false to claim the United States was arming or funding rebels.


Speaking slowly, with a raspy voice, the Liberian leader declared: "I love this country very much. This is why I have decided to sacrifice my presidency."


"They can call off their dogs now." Taylor said. "We can have peace."


It was a goodbye that few would hear in his desperate, war-divided capital — preoccupied in the search for food, and without fuel to keep radio or TV stations on the air.


Two months of rebel sieges have left well over 1,000 civilians dead in the capital, as insurgents and Taylor's forces dueled with the city of 1.3 million as its battlefield. The war has left Taylor controlling little but downtown, referred to derisively by rebels as Taylor's "Federal Republic of Central Monrovia."


West African leaders extracted Taylor's promises to leave Monday, to be followed by exile in Nigeria at some unspecified time after.


At least three West African heads of state, including South African President Thabo Mbeki, were expected for what Taylor's regime was trying to organize into an hours-long formal resignation ceremony.


Taylor recorded the farewell speech for radio, at a desk behind shelves piled high with folders. Lit by generators running on fuel scrounged by the presidency, the scene was recorded separately on scratchy audiotape.


By late Sunday, the speech had not been played on local radio in the unlit capital, shattered by shelling and littered with shrapnel, bullet casings and rubbish from looting by Taylor's forces.


The recording session came as at least one car piled high with luggage pulled out of Taylor's high-walled private home.


Female members of Taylor's party danced outside to show support and maimed veterans of 14 years of conflict under Taylor stood by aimlessly.


Support stopped just across the street from the former warlord's home. "We've been praying to Almighty God for this day," said Theoway Gayweh, among small crowds gathered across the street to watch what they hoped would be the last hours of Taylor's regime.


Most in government-held Monrovia spent the day scouting for food in markets that had little to offer except leaves.





Others picked their way to churches in ragged Sunday best along water-clogged streets, unrepaired since Taylor, then a rebel leader, launched Liberia into civil war in 1989.

Fighting since then has left more than 100,000 Liberians dead. International aid agencies estimate virtually all of Liberia's roughly 3 million people have been chased from their home by war, at one time or another, under Taylor.

His rag-tag forces, paid by looting, are accused by rights groups and Liberia's people of routine raping, robbing, torture, forced labor and summary killings. Rebels, to a lesser extent so far, likewise are accused of abuse.

Taylor made no apologies — asking only forgiveness from any he may have wronged, in what have been his years of carnage.

He compared his departure from the presidency to Jesus submitting himself to the Romans.

"If I were the problem — which you know and I know I'm not — I would ... become the sacrificial lamb," Taylor said. "I would become the whipping boy that you should live."

Perhaps crucially, Taylor made no direct mention of his promise to leave Liberia. Closing his speech, he declared: "I will always remember you wherever I am, and I say, God willing, I will be back."

Taylor has accepted an offer of asylum in Nigeria, but he has also hedged on when he will go. He has said that he would like to remain in politics.

Rebel leader Sekou Conneh met in Nigeria's capital, Abuja, with Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, who has offered Taylor exile. Obasanjo urged Conneh to support West African-led peace efforts, Obasanjo spokeswoman Remi Oyo said.

Conneh, in turn, pledged to open Monrovia's rebel-held port quickly for humanitarian supplies — but indicated that would come only after Taylor's departure.

On the rebel-held side of Taylor's capital, rebels were skeptical of that day coming.

"Until Taylor resigns, I won't believe it," said Sekou Fofana, on turf patrolled by boys as young as 10 guarded with AK-47s.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE: AP writer Jonathan Paye-Layleh in Monrovia contributed to this report.

OzMan
08-10-2003, 09:40 PM
I still think this guy is giving up too easily. I think he is going to leave with a little more of a bang, literally.

Like Murphy says:
"If your original plan is working, you're walking into an ambush."

usa320
08-10-2003, 10:26 PM
Too bad for him if he does have something up his sleeves...chances are anything he tries will be a failure, and he will end up getting screwed over... I think the guy should just back out quietly.

Seraphim
08-11-2003, 11:18 AM
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=514&e=1&u=/ap/20030811/ap_on_re_af/liberia_030811140923

Liberian President Taylor Steps Down


By ELLEN KNICKMEYER, Associated Press Writer

MONROVIA, Liberia - President Charles Taylor, the former warlord blamed for 14 years of bloodshed in Liberia (news - web sites) and indicted for war crimes in Sierra Leone, resigned Monday and surrendered power to his vice president.



Pushed to resign by the United States and West African leaders, Taylor declared that history would judge him kindly, speaking at his long-promised resignation ceremony in Liberia's war-blasted capital.


African leaders said his departure marks the end of an era of bloodshed. Yet rebels besieging the capital threatened to resume fighting if Taylor did not leave for exile in Nigeria immediately.


Taylor, who has reneged on repeated promises to resign, began his farewell address by exhorting the international community to help Liberia. "We beg of you, we plead with you not to make this another press event."


"History will be kind to me. I have fulfilled my duties," he said, adding, "I have accepted this role as the sacrificial lamb ... I am the whipping boy."

budanski
08-11-2003, 11:28 AM
LOLOLOL He blamed it all on Bush also!!
That's the newest fad. No matter what happened in the past 14 years be sure to blame Bush. Even though he has only been President for 3 years.

ROFLMAO!!

usa320
08-11-2003, 11:48 AM
I have a cold. Its all because of Bush and his poor environmental policies, it has nothing to do with me going swimming in cold water yesterday. :roll:

people ignore the obvious reasons for their problems and instead make **** up to furhter their agenda.

duck
08-11-2003, 11:53 AM
You are also more likely to get adult-age diabetes and asthma because of his environmental policies,as are your kids. Nothing to do with Africa or cold water, though.

He219
08-11-2003, 12:38 PM
....calling it an "American war" and suggesting it was motivated by U.S. eagerness for Liberia's gold, diamonds and other reserves....


I can just see Mortimer jump on that one....