Liberia: FrontPageAfrica Obtains a 2003 Act of Legislature Granting General Amnesty to All Partakers of the 14-Year Civil Conflict
Liberia: FrontPageAfrica Obtains a 2003 Act of Legislature Granting General Amnesty to All Partakers of the 14-Year Civil Conflict
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MONROVIA – The establishment of a war crimes court in Liberia for the prosecution of the likes of Senator Prince Y. Johnson and his cohorts might be illegal if the ‘hidden act’ of legislature enacted in 2003 that granted amnesty to all persons associated with Liberia’s civil war beginning December 1989 to August 2003 is brought to the fore.
The Act, a copy of which
FrontPageAfrica has obtained, is titled “
Judge Eva Mappy Morgan, Head Judge of the Commercial Court of Liberia
While Judge Eva Mappy Morgan of the Commercial Court at the Temple of Justice is awaiting Chief Justice Francis Korkpor’s decision as to whether she will serve her one-year suspension without pay and benefits, the judge is leaving no stone unturned in exposing ills in the Judicial Branch of the Government.
Judge Morgan’s suspension recommendation comes immediately after the Judiciary Inquiry Commission (JIC) investigative report found her liable for the alleged unilateral decision that authorized the withdrawal of over US$3 million out of the account of the Ducor Petroleum Inc housed at the Liberia Bank for Development and Investment (LBDI).
Rev. Cllr. Dr. Pearl Brown Bull declares at Providence Baptist 200 Anniversary
Liberian lawyer and minister of the Gospel, Rev. Cllr. Pearl Brown Bull, has declared that Liberia’s foundation is in trouble if its citizens remain standing on the “Faulty foundation” that has upheld the country for 173 years.
In her sermon, delivered at the 200th anniversary of the Providence Baptist Church on Sunday, March 7, the vocal Liberian female lawyer and preacher identified “Wickedness and greed for money” as vices that have taken over the true essence and motto of the establishment of Liberia.
Many Liberians claim that, because the country’s independence was signed in the Providence Baptist Church and those at the time were majority Christians, therefore “Liberia is built on Christian Principles,” an assumption that free thinkers and members of other religions have contested.