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EXECUTIVE MANSION PRESS BRIEFING SCRIP FROM THE OFFICE
OF THE PRESS SECRETARY TO THE PRESIDENT
By:
Cyrus Wleh Badio
Members
of the Press:
Let
me welcome you all to another Executive Mansion Press briefing
session this Monday, April 28, 2008. Audio for this and other
sessions can also be accessed on our website: www.emansion.gov.lr.
"
Let us begin by congratulating the Management of the News
newspaper, on the occasion last week, marking the 19th anniversary
of the existence of the paper. The news has and continues
to be a responsible partner in the development of this country.
We are pleased to have such a responsible independent media
institution playing its part towards the reconstruction and
renewal of our country. Our Office wishes the management and
staff of the News success, as together we strive to undertake
programs that would improve the welfare of the country and
its people.
"
As you may already be aware, the President, Madam Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf is currently in the United States, where she arrived
last week following an official visit to Denmark. The President
is using her visit to the United States to, among other activities,
hold informal meetings with officials of the United States
government and undergo a routine medical examination.
The
weeklong exercise has been concluded, and I am pleased to
inform you that the process has been very successful. President
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has been given a clean bill of health.
The President, let me state unequivocally, is fit as a fiddle.
The weeklong medical examination of the President was conducted
at the Bridgeport General Hospital in Connecticut, the United
States, under the supervision of several physicians who work
in the Bridgeport Yale University system. Let me add here
that the President's son, Dr. Adamah Sirleaf, is also a physician
at the Bridgeport General Hospital.
As
part of the medical examination, the President endured a stress
test, with an intensity closed to a similar one she underwent
in preparation for the 2005 elections.
The
President is now in Washington, D.C., where she is holding
informal meetings with a number of U.S. government officials.
The President is also holding meetings with members of the
International Senior Lawyers Project, a team of international
lawyers assisting Government on a pro bono basis, with concession
negotiations involving a few potential investors.
"
The President, who is a staunch Methodist, leaves for Fort
Worth, Texas, Tuesday to deliver a keynote address at the
Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church, expected
to host about 300,000 delegates. The Methodist Church in Liberia,
as you know, has and continues to play a paramount role in
Government's development programs, particularly in the educational,
health, agricultural and social welfare programs of the country.
The President will use her address to the Global Methodist
Conference to thank the Church for its support for Liberia
over the years, and highlight the challenges the country now
faces.
She
returns to New York Wednesday at a forum held under the auspices
of the International Crisis Group. The President, who served
as a Board Member of the ICG a few years ago, will receive
an award from the Group.
The President concludes her trip to the United States Friday,
with an address at Indiana University where she is to receive
an honorary degree, to be conferred by this leading American
Higher Institution of learning.
The
President concludes her trip to the United States Friday,
with an address at Indiana University where she is to receive
an honorary degree, to be conferred by this leading American
higher institution of learning.
Throughout
her visit abroad, President Johnson Sirleaf has been in close
consultation with key members of Government, including the
Vice President, the Chairman of the Cabinet, the Minister
of State and other officials of Government. The President
returns to the country early next week.
"
Finally, the Chief Executive is deeply troubled over the trend
of events at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)
involving one of its Commissioners. She believes that the
misunderstanding at the Commission would be solved at the
earliest, to enable this very vital arm of our country's recovery
process to continue with its duties without any undue distractions.
Regarding
Commissioner Bull and the decision by the Commission's Chairman
to have her suspended, the President is of the view that high
level Presidential appointments confirmed by the Liberian
senate could be dismissed only upon Presidential approval
or recommendation of the agency concerned. The Chairman of
the TRC, Cllr. Verdier, has pointed out to the President that
the legislation of the Commission gave the Chairman some extraordinary
authority.
This is a legal issue which is being researched. However,
although the President holds a different perspective on the
removal or suspension of high level appointees, in this case
a TRC commissioner, the President had no part to play in the
decision of Commissioner Bull to take the TRC to the Supreme
Court.
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