I last met her for an exclusive interview for the News Magazine eight years ago in July 2016. Madam Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, who turned 86 on 29 October 2024, is today, a lasting icon in Africa, Europe, Asia, the Middle East, America and Australia. She wears a similar portrait as Nigeria’s former President Olusegun Obasanjo, her long-standing ally, despite criticisms of her last six-year tenure in office and Obasanjo’s last tenure in office.
When we met in her office as Liberia celebrated her 169th independence anniversary in 2016, she said one memorable sentence, “…the main severe challenge in Africa today is infrastructure deficit”.
That statement is completely true today. If Africa is to truly develop, infrastructural amenities like good roads, uninterrupted electricity, pipe-borne water, efficient public transportation system, quality educational and health care facilities, good ICT services, etc. must be widely available to the people, irrespective of social status.
She is now 86. She still advocates these amenities at different international fora. She is a guest lecturer, and speaker, at multilayered engagements, worldwide.
At 86, she is still a cynosure of all eyes, even to her foes!
At 86, she is still relevant in both domestic and international affairs. She is Liberia’s reference point in global engagements.
Happy Birthday Ma Sirleaf!
Born Ellen Eugenia Johnson on 29 October 1938 in Monrovia to a Gola father and a Kru-German mother. She was educated at the College of West Africa. She completed her education in the United States, where she studied at Madison Business College, the University of Colorado Boulder, and Harvard University. She returned to Liberia to work in William Tolbert’s government as Deputy Minister of Finance from 1971 to 1974. Later, she worked again in the West, for the World Bank in the Caribbean and Latin America. In 1979, she received a cabinet appointment as Minister of Finance, serving until 1980.
After Samuel Doe seized power in 1980 in a coup d’état and executed Tolbert, Sirleaf fled to the United States. As recorded in “Ellen Johnson Sirleaf | Biography, Nobel Peace Prize, and Facts”, Encyclopedia Britannica, she worked for Citibank and then the Equator Bank. She returned to Liberia to contest a senatorial seat for Montserrado County in 1985, an election that was disputed. She was arrested as a result of her open criticism of the military government in 1985 and was sentenced to ten years imprisonment, although she was later released. Sirleaf continued to be involved in politics. She finished in second place in the 1997 presidential election, which was won by Charles Taylor.
She won the 2005 presidential election and took office on 16 January 2006. She was re-elected in 2011. As chronicled in “Liberia’s President Ellen Sirleaf, Becomes First Female ECOWAS Chair”, published by GhanaStar.com on 5 June 2016, she was the first woman in Africa elected as president of her country. She won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2011, in recognition of her efforts to bring women into the peacekeeping process. She has received numerous other awards for her leadership. In June 2016, Sirleaf was elected as the Chair of the Economic Community of West African States, making her the first woman to hold the position since it was created.
While not in fact Americo-Liberian in terms of ancestry, because of her parents’ upbringing and her own education in the West, Sirleaf, as reported by CBC News on 28 March 2006, “Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf: Liberia’s ‘Iron Lady”, is considered to be culturally Americo-Liberian, or assumed to be Americo-Liberian. Her parents both grew up in Monrovia, a center of Americo-Liberian influence, after being born in poor rural areas. Sirleaf does not identify as such.
As recorded in various biographical writings on her aggregated by Wikipedia, Sirleaf’s father, Jahmale Carney Johnson, was born into a Gola family in an impoverished rural region. He was the son of a minor Gola chief named Jahmale Carney and one of his wives, Jenneh, in Julijuah, Bomi County. Her father was sent to Monrovia for education, where he changed his surname to Johnson due to her father’s loyalty to President Hilary R. W. Johnson, Liberia’s first native-born president. Jahmale Johnson grew up in Monrovia, where he was raised by an Americo-Liberian family with the surname McCritty. He later entered politics; he was the first Liberian from an indigenous ethnic group to be elected to the country’s national legislature.
Sirleaf’s mother was also born into poverty, in Greenville. Her grandmother, Juah Sarwee, sent Sirleaf’s mother to the capital, Monrovia, when her German husband (Sirleaf’s grandfather) had to flee the country after Liberia declared war on Germany during World War I. Cecilia Dunbar, a member of a prominent Americo-Liberian family in the capital, adopted and raised Sirleaf’s mother.
Former President Sirleaf attended the College of West Africa, a preparatory school, from 1948 to 1955. She married James Sirleaf when she was seventeen years old. The couple had four sons together, and she was primarily occupied as a homemaker. Early on in their marriage, James worked for the Department of Agriculture, and Sirleaf worked as a bookkeeper for an auto-repair shop.
She travelled with her husband to the United States in 1961 to continue her education and earned an associate degree in Accounting at Madison Business College, in Madison, Wisconsin. When they returned to Liberia, James continued his work in the Agriculture Department and Sirleaf pursued a career in the Treasury Department (Ministry of Finance).
Sirleaf returned to college to finish her bachelor’s degree. In 1970, she earned a BA in economics from the Economics Institute of the University of Colorado Boulder, where she also spent a summer preparing for graduate studies. Sirleaf studied economics and public policy at Harvard Kennedy School from 1969 to 1971, earning a Master of Public Administration. She returned to her native Liberia to work in the administration of William Tolbert, where she was appointed as Assistant Minister of Finance. Jack Robinson, in “Mrs. Sirleaf on ‘Stimulating the Economy’”, Liberian Age, 29 June 1973, pp. 1–2 wrote that while in that position, she attracted attention with a “bombshell” speech to the Liberian Chamber of Commerce that claimed that the country’s corporations were harming the economy by hoarding or sending their profits overseas.
Sirleaf served as Assistant Minister from 1972 to 1973 in the Tolbert administration. She resigned after a disagreement about government spending. Subsequently, she was appointed as Minister of Finance a few years later, serving from 1979 to April 1980.
Master Sergeant Samuel Doe, a member of the indigenous Krahn ethnic group, seized power in a military coup on 12 April 1980; he ordered the assassination of Tolbert and execution by firing squad of all but four members of his Cabinet. The People’s Redemption Council took control of the country and led a purge against the previous government. Frank Sherman, wrote in Liberia: The Land, Its People, History and Culture (31 January 2010) that Sirleaf initially accepted a post in the new government as the President of the Liberian Bank for Development and Investment. She fled the country in November 1980 after publicly criticising Doe and the People’s Redemption Council for their management of the country.
Sirleaf initially moved to Washington, D.C., and worked for the World Bank. In 1981, she moved to Nairobi, Kenya to serve as Vice President of the African Regional Office of Citibank. She resigned from Citibank in 1985 following her involvement in the 1985 general election in Liberia. She went to work for Equator Bank, a subsidiary of HSBC.
In 1992, Sirleaf was appointed as the director of the United Nations Development Programme’s Regional Bureau for Africa at the rank of assistant administrator and assistant secretary general (ASG). She is internationally known as Africa’s Iron Lady, due to her political prowess. She resigned from this role in 1997 to run for the presidency of Liberia. During her time at the UN, she was one of the seven internationally eminent persons designated in 1999 by the Organization of African Unity to investigate the Rwandan genocide, one of the five Commission Chairs for the Inter-Congolese Dialogue, and one of the two international experts selected by UNIFEM to investigate and report on the effect of conflict on women and women’s roles in peacebuilding. She was the initial Chairperson of the Open Society Initiative for West Africa (OSIWA) and a visiting Professor of Governance at the Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration (GIMPA). SOURCE: THE NEWS, NIGERIA.