Former football star George Weah is set to become the president of Liberia.
Robtel Neajai Pailey tells Yvonne Yong Mr Weah is a populist favourite who won the vote due to heavy political backing and a disillusionment with the status quo.
Academic | Activist | Author
Former football star George Weah is set to become the president of Liberia.
Robtel Neajai Pailey tells Yvonne Yong Mr Weah is a populist favourite who won the vote due to heavy political backing and a disillusionment with the status quo.
Interview from 1:14...
Liberia's electoral commission will have preliminary results on a presidential runoff that will mark the West African country's first democratic transfer of power since 1944. In the race, the nation's vice president is pitted against a national soccer star...
Liberians agree that the legacy of outgoing president and Nobel peace laureate Ellen Johnson Sirleaf is that she consolidated peace after back-to-back civil wars and an outbreak of Ebola. This is a watershed moment, says political analyst Robtel Neajai Pailey.
Interview from 1:52:40 to 1:57:33: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b09jqt6r
The Elephant in conversation with Robtel Neajai Pailey, academic, writer and activist.
In this programme Desmond Davies talks to Dr. Robtel Neajai Pailey, author of Gbagba (loosely translated as 'trickery') and advocate on anti-corruption in Liberia. Dr. Pailey discusses her book, the ongoing election process and peace and security in Libera. Photo: Asa Mathat via Flickr
AfricaNow! also focuses its attention on the postponed Liberian presidential run-off with Dr. Robtel Neajai Pailey, Liberian academic, activist, political analyst and author. [Interview from 37:45 to 51:30]
November 4, 2017 Monrovia, Liberia—Update: This story was updated at 12:10 p.m., Nov. 6., after Liberia’s Supreme Court halted the runoff election.
Beside a busy strip of road near the downtown of Liberia’s capital city, a tall mural tells the story of the country’s recent history – or at least, someone’s version of it.
“MA ELLEN,” it says in the familiar language Liberians often use to describe their president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. “THANKS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT AND FOR THE PEACE.”
Below the words are a portrait of President Sirleaf, her face creased by smile lines, and a series of idyllic scenes – a lush university campus, a tidy hospital, a bridge flanked by palm trees.
To many who have watched Sirleaf’s career from afar, this is a neat summary of her legacy…But for Liberians, who will soon elect her successor, Ma Ellen’s legacy is far less settled…
“By the end of the war, women had realized they could be political beings, and some men had too,” says Robtel Neajai Pailey, a Liberian political analyst who also worked for Sirleaf during her first term and recently co-authored with Ms. Williams an opinion piece on the legacy of her presidency. “It’s no coincidence that Sirleaf was able to ride this wave of renewed autonomy.”
MONROVIA (Reuters) - George Weah has been here before: on the goal line of the Liberian presidency, one run-off vote from victory. Unlike in 2005, however, his support is much wider and many expect him at last to succeed...
“Weah's populism and inability to articulate a coherent platform ... are deeply concerning,” said Liberian political analyst Robtel Neajai Pailey in a recent opinion piece for Liberian website The Bush Chicken.
“Success at football does not translate into success in the presidency of a traumatized, poorly managed, post-war nation.”
MONROVIA (Reuters) - After a dozen years of recovery under Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who won the Nobel Peace Prize for helping bring peace after civil war turned her country into a wasteland, Liberians are hopeful about their first democratic power transfer for 73 years.
Twenty candidates are standing to replace Johnson Sirleaf in a first round on Tuesday. With nobody likely to win a majority outright, the top two are expected to face each other in a run-off in around a month. While the election campaign has been rambunctious, it has been mainly peaceful so far, and most expectations are that it will come off without bloodshed...
“High level corruption has been a slap in the face for Liberians, most of whom live in abject poverty,” said Liberian political analyst Robtel Neajai Pailey who also criticized what she described as “hero worship” of Johnson Sirleaf.
Monrovia (AFP) - Liberia's female politicians profess near-universal respect for Ellen Johnson Sirleaf as she steps down after 12 years as president -- but many also say the glass ceiling that Africa's first female leader cracked remains firmly in place...
'Anti-feminist'?
Two Liberian feminists have caused a stir by asserting in international media that Sirleaf has "failed" women in the political realm, potentially tarring her legacy.
"I think President Sirleaf is anti-feminist when it comes to politics," Robtel Neajai Pailey, who co-authored a widely shared article with activist Korto Reeves Williams, told AFP.
She accuses Sirleaf of indifference to a call by Liberia's Women's Legislative Caucus for women to occupy 30 percent of political party leadership positions in 2010.
Pailey believes women fall behind in gaining affiliation with larger political parties and often lack their own funding, unlike some of this year's millionaire male candidates.
'Soul of a Nation' is the title of a big new art show at Tate Modern in London. It features 160 works by black American artists from the two decades beginning in 1963 -- years of huge social change in America. Our arts correspondent, Vincent Dowd, speaks to the show's curators. And Iranian football stars call on government to overturn ban on women in stadiums.
Presenter Julian Worricker discusses these stories with guests: Rami Khouri and Robtel Neajai Pailey.
Young Liberian scholar Robtel Neajai Pailey has been selected as one of three successful candidates for the 2017 Mo Ibrahim Foundation (MIF) Leadership Fellows. Dr. Pailey was one of three announced by the Foundation on Tuesday, with the other two hailing from Botswana and Senegal. They were successful out of over 2,000 candidates who applied for the latest edition of the Fellowship.
Sudanese billionaire turned governance guru Dr. Mo Ibrahim sits down to chat with 5 young African leaders (including Liberian academic, activist and author Robtel Neajai Pailey) about all things personal and political.
As Liberia prepares the succession of the first woman to be elected Head of State in Africa, the team asks if the country is ready for such a monumental change after years of a brutal war, featuring Liberian academic Robtel Neajai Pailey.
Robtel Neajai Pailey, a Liberian academic based at the University of Oxford, acknowledges that the Lebanese community has contributed to Liberia's economy, but she sympathizes with Harding.
"The bottom line is we don't have the luxury of neglecting Liberian small- to medium-sized enterprises. I think if we were a middle-income country that hadn't had a war for 14 years we could say, 'Yes, let's open up and let the market take its course,' " she says. "But even countries that preach laissez-faire economics protect certain industries and give subsidies to their farmers."
Robtel Neajai Pailey is an award-winning Liberian academic, activist and author.
Robtel Neajai Pailey, PhD
robtel@robtelneajaipailey.com