Henry Boimah Fahnbulleh
Henry Boimah Fahnbulleh (born 1949) is a Liberian politician and diplomat. He is the Liberian Government's current National Security Advisor in the Ellen Johnson Sirleaf administration. Immediately previous to his appointment as National Security Advisor, he served as Advisor on International Affairs in the same government.[1] He served as Foreign Minister from 1981 to 1983 under President Samuel Doe.
Fahnbulleh's father, H. Boima Fahnbulleh, Sr. was also prominent in Liberian society; in Fahnbulleh Jr's words, Fahnbulleh Sr was "killed while striving for socio-economic justice".[2] In 1968, Fahnbulleh Sr was convicted of treason based on his alleged writing of letters to other countries' ambassadors asking for help in a conspiracy to overthrow the existing Liberian government. According to the prosecution, he had been plotting since 1956; a major portion of the prosecution's case consisted of alleging that Fahnbulleh had criticised the Liberian government in front of other countries' ambassadors while he was serving as the Liberian ambassador to Kenya.[3] Fahnbulleh Sr adamantly denied the charges, stating that he deserved a new trial because the prosecution's arguments were based on events that never happened. The prosecution replied that his arguments were "unmeritorious" because the events did not need to have happened in order for him to be guilty, and his request for a new trial was denied.[4] Very soon after taking office in 1971, President William R. Tolbert, Jr. recognised that Fahnbulleh had been the victim of trumped-up charges and pardoned him.[5]
Fahnbulleh was educated in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Kenya, and the United States.[6] He graduated from Fourah Bay College in Sierra Leone having studied politics, philosophy, and history. He gained his graduate degree in politics from Howard University in Washington and his doctorate from George Washington University in political philosophy and international politics.
He has lectured at the University of Liberia and also served as Minister of Education and of Foreign Affairs in the Tolbert and Doe Liberian governments from 1978 to 1983. He was a "prominent" member of the Liberian NGO Movement for Justice in Africa (MOJA) in the 1970s.[7] He lived in exile in Europe, spending some time in London, from 1983 to 1990 and from 1997 to the early years of the 2000s (decade). In Ghana in 1986, Fahnbulleh was creating his own opposition group to President Doe, named the Front for Popular Democracy in Liberia (FPDL),[8] or Popular Democratic Front.[9] Charles Taylor claimed that because he did not join the MOJA/FPDL grouping in Accra, Fahnbulleh arranged his arrest by Ghanaian security forces.[8] The FPDL has apparently been extinct since 1990. Fahnbulleh was still in Accra in 1987.
Fahnbulleh has written and lectured extensively on Liberian politics, editing the book Voices of Protest: Liberia on the Edge 1974-1980, published by Universal Publishers in 2005.
References
- ↑ White House, Guest List for the Luncheon in Honor on the Visit of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, March 21, 2006.
- ↑ C. Emmanuel Johnson, "Liberia: Fahnbulleh, Carlor, Gen. Dubar Refuse to Apologize", AllAfrica, 18 August 2008.
- ↑ "Treason Trial On". Liberian Star, 1968-06-11: 1/8.
- ↑ "Fahnbulleh Asks for a New Trial". Liberian Star, 1968-07-09: 1/8.
- ↑ "Miatta Fahnbulleh Ready To Make Liberia Proud at Nobel Peace Prize Concert", FrontPage Africa, 2011-11-21. Accessed 2012-06-29.
- ↑ Voices of Protest: Liberia on the Edge 1974-1980, author's biography
- ↑ Women and Post-conflict Development: A Case Study on Liberia, p. 54.
- 1 2 Charles Taylor interview with Baffour Ankomah, Ghanaian Chronicle (Accra), 12–18 October 1992, Kwesi Yankah and Lazarus D. Maayang, "Charles Taylor: dark days in Ghana", Uhuru (Accra), 3 (1990), pp. 39-42, Mark Huband, "The Liberian Civil War", pp. 47-51, all cited in Stephen Ellis, The Mask of Anarchy, London: Hurst and Company, 1999, p. 68.
- ↑ "Fahnbulleh Speaks". Monrovia Weekend 1991-03-23/24: 1/7.
Preceded by Gabriel Baccus Matthews |
Foreign Minister of Liberia 1981–1983 |
Succeeded by Ernest Eastman |
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