Demands  to audit Weah increase 

By Joseph Tumbey 

Weah’s inauguration

Opposition blocs challenge  president  George  Weah  to publish  a turned over note received from the Former  Liberia  President, Ellen  Johnson  Sirleaf, said  Weah inherited  over US$150M but deceived  Liberians  that he inherited a broken  government. 

The opposition  Unity  party  joined  the call made  from the governance Council  member of the  Movement for Democracy  and Reconstruction MDR party, Senator  Prince Y. Johnson   claimed that Weah  met  over US$150 but lied  under oath  that  he inherited a broken  government. 

“I saw the turned over note from Ellen  Johnson  Sirleaf, but told me she can’t  give it to me because  she is no longer  our Leadership  but Weah”, Senator  Johnson  stated on the  spoon  talk show  over the weekend. 

According  to him, right  after he immigrated wrote the Senate  Protempore , Albert Chea requested  him to site President  Weah to bring to the Senate’s  the turned  over note from the former Labria  president but yielded  no fruit. 

Senator Johnson  stated,  “Senator  Chea trashed my Communication  informing me by then that there are whole lots of protests  shaking  the government  and this will produce the worst  action against  Weah”. 

Meanwhile,  the former ruling  Unity Party UP  has joint  the demand to audit  the Liberian  President, George Weah  stating  that  they left US$ 157 million in the National reserve at the Central Bank of Liberia

“On the claim from the CDC government that it met a broken economy and empty cover, we reiterate that the Unity Party left 157 million in the National reserve at the Central Bank of Liberia ”, UP  narrated  in their February  3, 2023 release. 

UP however,  urging   George Weah government to heed to the challenge of Senator Prince Johnson to Publish the turnover note the Unity Part government presented when Weah assumed the helm of the Liberian Presidency to prove his inhibited  broken  government   as soon  as possible  to set the record  straight  for October  general and Presidential elections in Liberia. 

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