Liberia VP Boakai concedes presidential race to former soccer star
Weah
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[December 29, 2017]
By Edward McAllister
MONROVIA (Reuters) - Liberia's vice
president Joseph Boakai conceded defeat in a presidential election
run-off to former soccer star George Weah on Friday, easing the
country further towards its first democratic transition of power in
decades.
Boakai's concession avoids the kind of protracted legal challenge
that followed the first round of the election and delayed the
run-off by over a month. Weah will succeed Ellen Johnson Sirleaf as
president next month.
"Even though I will not be the captain of the ship, it is my fervent
desire that the ship of state always sails smoothly," Boakai,
dressed all in black, told about 100 supporters at his party
headquarters in the capital Monrovia.
"I called George Weah to congratulate him as winner in the
presidential contest," he said, speaking softly to muted applause.
"We must work to unite our people because Liberia is bigger than all
of us."
Preliminary results announced on Thursday showed Weah won Tuesday's
run-off with 61.5 percent of the vote, based on more than 98 percent
of the ballots cast.
But the man who won international acclaim at AC Milan, Paris Saint
Germain and other top European clubs faces stiff challenges at home
after a campaign in which he provided few specific policy proposals.
Johnson Sirleaf's 12-year rule cemented peace after Liberia's
1989-2003 civil war and won her the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize but she
has been criticized over high-level corruption scandals and
persistent poverty.
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George Weah, former soccerplayer
and presidential candidate of Coalition for Democratic Change (CDC),
arrives at his party's headquarters in Monrovia, Liberia December
27, 2017. REUTERS/Thierry Gouegnon
Liberia ranks 177 out of 188 countries on the U.N. Human Development
Index and nearly two-thirds of the population lives below the
poverty line. Development was also hit by the Ebola outbreak from
2014-16 and a drop in the price of iron ore.
A falling out with Boakai's supporters, which saw Johnson Sirleaf's
own Unity Party accuse her of interfering in the first round of the
election -- charges she denied -- has also left lingering bad
feelings.
"Ellen corrupted this country," said Victor Smith, an IT consultant
and Boakai supporter, after the concession speech. "It is a bad
thing that Weah was elected. He lacks the experience. He never gave
a platform. He doesn't have the skills to be a leader."
On Thursday, Johnson Sirleaf announced plans to form a joint
presidential transition team with the president-elect. It will
coordinate the democratic transfer of power, Liberia's first since
1944, and ensure Weah is provided with regular national security
briefings.
(Additional reporting by Alphonso Toweh and James Giahyue; Writing
by Aaron Ross; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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