Central
Bank of Liberia
|
Fifteen Liberians,
including the son of former president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, are banned from
leaving the country while the government investigates the whereabouts of US$104
million in missing cash intended for the central bank, the government said.
Reuters
report continues:
A
series of shipments of notes ordered by Liberia's central bank from printers
overseas have disappeared since last year after passing through the country's
main ports, Liberia's information minister Eugene Nagbe told local radio on
Tuesday.
The
missing amount is the equivalent of nearly 5% of the West African
country's gross domestic product (GDP).
Charles
Sirleaf, the son of Nobel Peace Prize winner Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, and former
central bank governor, Milton Weeks, are among those barred from travel as part
of the investigation, said a Ministry of Information statement released late on
Tuesday.
"The
government... takes the ongoing investigation seriously because it has national
security implications," it said.
Neither
Sirleaf nor Weeks were immediately reachable for comment. Central Bank
officials also did not respond to requests for comment.
Investigators
are still trying to ascertain how much money was ordered, where it was printed,
how much of it eventually arrived in the country, and where it is now. The
money was ordered when Sirleaf was still in power, before President George Weah
took over this year.
Justice
Minister Frank Musah Dean said Sirleaf's administration had not informed
Liberia's current government of the initial order and that an investigation had
begun once Weah became aware of it in August.
Information
minister Nagabe told Voice of America on Tuesday there were no records of the
containers being collected from the ports, despite several bank staff employees
having written a request for pick-up on March 31. The containers were recorded
as having arrived in November 2017 and August 2018.
Liberia
does not have its own mint, and the central bank is the only body with the
power to order new currency. Liberia's government last approved the printing of
new notes in August 2016, as the country recovered from a devastating Ebola
epidemic.
The
missing cash comes as an unexpected blow to Liberia, one of the world's poorest
countries that suffered two civil wars between 1989 and 2003. Ebola struck in
2013, killing thousands over the following three years.
Sirleaf
was lauded for cementing peace during her 12-year presidency but was criticized for failing to rein in high-level corruption.
Charles Sirleaf, one of three of her sons appointed to government posts, was suspended from his position as Deputy Central Bank Governor in 2012 during an anti-corruption investigation. But he was re-appointed interim central bank chief in February 2016, drawing accusations of nepotism.
No comments:
Post a Comment