Secretary Clinton Meets With Embassy Monrovia Personnel and Their Families
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Embassy Monrovia, Monrovia, Liberia
August 13, 2009
SECRETARY CLINTON:
Thank you so much, and what a personal pleasure it is for me to be
here. Ambassador, your leadership of this mission and, of course, your
long, personal relationship with this country and your commitment to
building a stronger partnership between Liberia and the United States is
really exceptional, and I just thank you for your service. You have a
great team here, and I know especially how dedicated this team has been
not only in the last three and a half years of democracy, but in the
years before.
I’m delighted to finally be here and to have a
chance to say thank you. Thank you so much. Thank you for your courage,
thank you for your dedication and professionalism, and thank you for
your commitment to advancing the interests that the United States has in
seeing a peaceful, unified, prosperous Liberia. And I just finished
addressing the legislature and told them that the United States would
stand with them. We expected to see the kind of progress that is
important for the betterment of the people of Liberia, but we would be
at the side of the Liberians as they move forward.
I also have to
say that Embassy Monrovia has a reputation throughout the State
Department and USAID. (Applause.) I have heard stories of the heroism
and sacrifice that many of the employees here exhibited during the civil
war. I know there were numerous evacuations. Those of you who have been
here for a long time, particularly our locally engaged staff, had to
endure separations from your children and your spouses for days and
weeks because of the conflict in the streets. And of course, we will
always remember the ultimate sacrifices by the more than a dozen
courageous Liberians who lost their lives protecting this Embassy. And I
want to extend my appreciation and my sympathy to their families and to
their loved ones, if you would convey that for me.
During all
those years of strife, the employees of this Embassy stayed behind to
feed, house, and protect the remaining civilians while others were
evacuated. These doors never closed in all that time. There are people
in Washington who said, “We want to move them out, it’s too dangerous.”
But I have to tell you that the poor staff here said, “We are needed
here, and we must stay.” And this Embassy was instrumental in pushing
the warring parties to achieve peace.
Now, fortunately, this
country is no longer torn by violent conflict. But there is still so
much work to be done. Peace is fragile. The stability is fragile. The
democracy is fragile.
President Obama in his historic speech in
Ghana made very clear that the future of Africa is up to Africans. The
future of Liberia is up to Liberians. But we’re going to do everything
we can to help that future turn out to be a bright one for the people
here (inaudible). (Applause.)