MONROVIA, Liberia
From Liberia's swampy slums to international football star and then president, George Weah is contesting a second term in a run-off on Tuesday, defending a controversial record and facing determined opposition.
Weah won in 2017 with more
than 61% of the vote, and again faces a second round this time after nearly
tying with old rival Joseph Boakai in last month's first round.
Weah, 57, led a vigorous
campaign for a "first round victory" but has had to defend his record
in office.
Critics have accused his
government of corruption and him of failing to keep a promise to improve the
lives of the poorest.
His victory in 2017 sparked
high hopes of change in one of the least developed countries in the world,
which is still reeling from civil war and the 2014-2016 Ebola epidemic.
Weah had spent the previous
decade building political credibility, including three years in the Senate, to
match his sporting icon status.
"I can guarantee that the
years 2024 and beyond will be better for all Liberians," he told his
ruling Coalition for Democratic Change, CDC, at their national campaign launch
in September.
Posters of Weah and his
running mate Jewel Howard-Taylor, the ex-wife of jailed former president and
warlord Charles Taylor, can be seen in the streets of Monrovia.
In the capital's Clara Town,
where Weah was born, youngsters still idolize the first African player to win
both FIFA's World Player of the Year trophy and the Ballon d'Or.
"I'm 100% behind George
Weah," said Marcally Mulbah, sitting on his motorbike chatting to friends.
"He's a man of peace."
Twenty-two-year-old student
Godgift Pewee sports CDC party bracelets and recalled Weah playing soccer with
him at the opening of a sports complex in the area.
Pewee said Weah is tolerant
and has jailed no one for political reasons.
Janga Kowo, a long-time friend
of Weah and now Comptroller General of the West African country, told AFP that
Liberians still love their president.
"President Weah is the
most approachable Liberian leader ever," he said.
"Socially, this is a man
who connects with the Liberian people, that is why the Liberian people will
continue to show love to him."
But on a nearby street strewn
with plastic rubbish, Saturday Gbalah, 42, said the president had lost his
"connection" to the people.
"I loved George
Weah," he said, and went to vote for him on crutches. But today
"conditions are worse," with the price of rice and other basic foods
spiraling, Gbalah said.
Weah is Liberia's 25th
president after taking over from Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who had maintained a
peace desperately needed after a war that killed an estimated quarter of a
million people.
He was largely absent from
Liberia during the 1989-2003 civil wars, playing for a string of top-flight
European teams, including Paris Saint-Germain, AC Milan and Chelsea.
But as president, Weah has not
set up a war crimes tribunal despite international and domestic demand.
A member of the Kru ethnic
group, Weah was raised by his grandmother in the Gibraltar district, a
reclaimed swamp and one of Monrovia's worst slums.
He had pledged to govern for
the poor, to create employment and invest in education. Critics say he has
failed.
He came under fire last year
for a prolonged absence from Liberia — 40 days at conferences and summits as
well as time at the World Cup, where his son played for the United States.
Bad governance is another
issue raised by the opposition. Despite the president's pledges to tackle
corruption, it has increased on his watch.
Liberia sits 142nd out of 180
on Transparency International's 2022 corruption index.
"There is a mismatch
between words and action," said Ibrahim Al-bakri Nyei, director of the
Ducor Institute for Social and Economic Research.
Despite legislation introduced
in July, opponents accuse Weah of failing to halt drug trafficking.
At the campaign launch, Weah
said he had built roads and hospitals, paid secondary school students' exam
fees and opened parks and sports facilities.
"This will be replicated
throughout the 15 counties (of Liberia) after you have given us a new
mandate," he vowed.
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