Address to Joint Session of Liberian National Legislature
Address
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Capitol Building, Monrovia, Liberia
August 13, 2009
SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank
you. Thank you very much. Thank you for this great honor of having the
chance to address the democratically elected legislature of Liberia.
(Applause.) Thank you, Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, President
pro-tem, all of the members of this legislature in joint session, other
dignitaries who are with us today, and especially the people of this
country, a country that was engulfed in war just a few years ago.
I
know that some of you in this chamber bore arms against each other, but
the people of Liberia demanded peace, stability, and a better future.
(Applause.) And (inaudible) your being here, committed to the peaceful
resolution of dispute, is a great message that the people of Liberia
have representatives of a unified government in a parliament and in a
presidency entrusted to serve the Liberian people, to help rebuild the
nation, and to realize the goals of development that will once again
give every boy and girl in this country a chance to fulfill his or her
God-given potential. (Applause) That 14 years of bloodshed and
lawlessness could produce peace, free elections, and a democratic
government is not so much a triumph of might, but a triumph of the human
spirit.
And that is what I would like to talk with you about
today – how to keep that spirit alive, how to build strong, democratic
institutions, honest and competent leaders, engage citizens on a
foundation of human dignity.
I bring greetings from President
Obama. (Applause.) The President considers himself a son of Africa, and
in his historic speech in Ghana, he said much about what he hoped for
(inaudible) on his heart. Remember that he said that the future of
Africa is up to the Africans. The future of Liberia is up to the
Liberians. (Applause.)
But it is also true that there are
paths toward that future which will lead in a positive direction, and
there are others that will lead in a negative direction. The choices
that are made every day will determine which path Liberia chooses.
When
President Johnson-Sirleaf gave her inaugural address to this assembly
just three-and-a-half years ago, she identified the core ideals that
have guided Liberia’s democracy movement through this nation’s darkest
days – peace, liberty, equality, opportunity, and justice for all. The
challenge for every democratic government, whether it is three years old
or 233 years old like ours, is how to translate those ideals into
results in the lives of people.
Democracy has to deliver, and
both President Obama and I believe that dignity is central to what is at
the core of successful democracies: a voice for every citizen in the
decisions that affect your life, your community, and your country; the
opportunity to earn a decent wage and provide for your family and live
without fear; an equal chance, no matter what your background, your
gender, your faith, ethnicity, or station in life; to combine your
motivation and ambition with the opportunity that every society should
present to its people; and a government elected freely and fairly,
accountable to the people it serves.
This vision of a
democratic society is at the root of the democracy that began to
flourish just those three-and-a-half years ago. It is still the vision
that should guide not only presidential leadership, but parliamentary
leadership as well.
Now, I have been on both sides of the
street, so to speak. I have been in the White House when my husband was
president. I have been in the Senate for eight years in both the
majority and the minority for most of the time. (Applause.) And now I am
back in the executive branch, working for President Obama. So let me
tell you that sometimes it appears to be from both sides of the street.
When I have been in the executive branch, I have wondered what the
Congress was up to and worried about the Congress. When I was in the
Congress, I wondered what the President was up to and worried about the
President. (Applause.) Where you stand is often determined by where you
sit.
But what I know is how important it is, especially in the
beginning, to have a level of cooperation toward meeting the common
goals to serve the people, and that no matter where that service finds
you, to be resolved, to try to constantly ask yourself what I think is
the most important question for any of us in public service: Is what I
am doing today – the decision I’m making, the bill I’m writing, the vote
I’m casting – likely to make life better for the last and the least
among us? (Applause.)
In just three years, there are
encouraging signs of progress. Your nation has adopted sound fiscal
policies with the support of this legislature. That was not easy, and it
is noted around the world. We encourage your legislature to continue
developing your budgetary oversight role. You have begun to attack
corruption and promote transparency. Liberia has made progress on debt
relief, and the economy continues to grow despite the global economic
crisis. (Applause.) Land tenure issues that remained persistent
impediments to economic progress have resulted in the legislature taking
the important step in passing the Land Commission Act. Your president
is working hard to build a competent and professional security sector,
and all of Liberia can take pride in the fact that this nation now has
free and compulsory education for primary school children, including
your girls. (Applause.)
So you have been climbing up that
mountain that sometimes looks like there is no end in sight. But you
still face huge challenges, and we stand ready to help you in
partnership and friendship. There are forces at work trying to undermine
the progress and fuel old tensions and feuds. Many Liberian people
still need jobs, electricity, housing, and education. Law enforcement is
still inadequate, and after years of war and lawlessness, institutions
have been left crippled, unable to function properly or serve the public
efficiently or effectively.
So it is, I think, important to
note that given the progress you’ve made, you must hold on to that and
continue up that mountain together – (applause) – because there is no
guarantee that the progress remains. Change is inevitable; progress is
not. We live with change every day. What each of us has to do is to
master the forces and winds of change to make sure that it results in
real, tangible progress for this country.
Now, there are no
magic wands or I would have brought one for every one of you. There are
no quick-fixes for countries making the transition from violent conflict
to lasting peace and stability. But one thing I know for sure – Liberia
has the talent, the resources, and the resilience to succeed if
everyone works together on behalf of the common good. (Applause.) And
Liberia also has the opportunity to be a model not just for Africa, but
for the rest of the world.
There is an agenda ahead of us
that I stand ready on behalf of our government to continue to offer our
assistance to achieve. First, (inaudible) build strong, democratic
institutions that work and are accountable and deliver results. If you
remember President Obama’s speech, he said something which I’ve heard
throughout my travels in Africa, that what Africa needs is not more
strong men, but strong institutions, institutions that will stand the
test of time, that will, frankly, survive good leaders and not-so-good
leaders, but which are strong enough to engender the faith and
confidence of the people of Liberia.
Ending corruption is
necessary to growing and sustaining such institutions and restoring the
public’s trust. I have been to countries that are far richer than
Liberia. These democracies have been in existence far longer, but
because they never tackled corruption, their future is repeating before
their eyes.
I will say to you what I said in two days in
Nigeria, a country that has the fifth-largest supply of petroleum and
gas, so many riches, and yet the number of people living in poverty is
growing. Nigeria is now further away from achieving the Millennium
Development Goals than they were ten years ago. That is a travesty. That
does not have to be either Nigeria’s future, and it should not be
Liberia’s future.
So how do we recognize the importance of
ending corruption? I think steps are being taken with the
Anti-Corruption Commission. But this legislature should also decide to
pass a code of conduct. It is something that – (applause) – allows you
to hold not just yourselves but each other accountable. We have over the
years in our Congress realized that human nature being what it is – and
I’m a Methodist so I know human nature gets us into most of the trouble
we get into – we have to have codes of conduct, regulatory frameworks,
ethical standards that guide the pursuit of the common good.
It is
also critical to have an electoral system that is credible, that will
produce free and fair elections in 2011. (Applause.) The world is
watching, and we take a personal interest in the elections to come in
Liberia because we know that this election, where there will be a
peaceful transition of power from one civilian authority to another,
will set in motion the future legitimacy of elections for years to come.
The
legislature can and must do its part by acting on the threshold bill so
that the process can move forward. (Applause.) You’ve already taken
steps in rebuilding effective institutions, and I congratulate you.
Conducting a census in the last three years was a very important
accomplishment, registering voters, ensuring that the three branches of
government are both competent and independent, demonstrating a unity of
purpose.
And I think too that as a famous former governor of
the state I represented for so many years (inaudible) and I know a place
that many of you know well and even lived in from time-to-time, Mario
Cuomo once said, “Politics is poetry, but governing is prose.”
(Laughter.) You go out and campaign as I have. It’s easy to say all
kinds of things. You get into this chamber, the job becomes harder.
(Applause.)
That’s why it’s important not to let politics,
which is a noble and critically essential profession, overwhelm
governing. As you prepare and gear up for the upcoming election, keeping
in mind that hard, contested elections are part of a democracy, but
then to (inaudible).
Now, I’ve been, again, on both sides.
I’ve won elections, and I’ve lost elections. (Laughter.) In a democracy,
there is no guarantee you’re going to win. I spent two years and a lot
of money running against president Obama, and he won. And then I went to
work to elect him. And then, much to my amazement, he asked me to be
his Secretary of State. (Applause.) And I must say that one of the most
common questions I’m asked around the world, from Indonesia to Angola,
is: How could you go to work for someone you were running against? I
said, because we both love our country. (Applause.) And I would argue
that it is that love that every successful country has to inculcate in
its people and its leaders so that the political process of a democracy
doesn’t break apart the country, doesn’t create so much bad blood and
ill feelings that people won’t accept the outcome of an election, or not
believe that they could have lost or refuse to move forward under those
circumstances. And that is what we know Liberia can do.
We
also know that there must be more done to enhance security for the
people of Liberia. Later, I will visit the National Police Academy,
where I will announce additional and accelerated U.S. support for the
police. (Applause.) As you know, our government is also training the
Liberian Armed Forces, and in my meetings with the president and
ministers of your government today, we talked about additional ways we
could provide security, particularly maritime security, so that the
coastline of Liberia, one of the most beautiful coastlines in the world,
one of the – (applause) – treasures of this country, will be protected.
We are committed to supporting you as you move forward on
this positive, progressive agenda. W e supported you for many years, but
now our support is really grounded in our confidence in your capacity,
your competence to deliver. (Applause.) Since the peace accords in 2003,
we have provided over $2 billion in assistance. We have supported the
United Nations security effort. We are committed to helping lift Liberia
by building a stronger economy that can spread opportunity and
prosperity to more people.
Right now, only 15 percent of the
Liberian people work in the formal sector. So job creation and raising
incomes is a critical task before you. So we will work with you to
strengthen the private sector, enhance trade opportunities, and rebuild
infrastructure, including roads, electrification, and information
technology. (Applause.) We are assisting your government with natural
resources management, food security, education for children, and adults
who missed the opportunity to go to school because of the war. And this
country is a focus for our Malaria Initiative.
I want to
congratulate Liberia for recently gaining eligibility for the African
Growth and Opportunity Act. I started my trip in Africa in Nairobi at
the AGOA conference, and I and the U.S. Trade Representative and our
Secretary of Agriculture emphasized that we want to do more to help
countries access and utilize AGOA, and we want to help Liberia to work
to achieve more products that can be exported duty-free into the United
States market. (Applause.)
I also applaud your efforts to
qualify for the Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative that will
complement the progress that you have made in bringing greater
transparency to the management of natural resources. This will improve
the business climate, attract investment, and stimulate the creation of
jobs. And I want to add that if done right, if you create the legal
framework for the exploitation of your natural resources, you will see a
revenue stream that will help to build the roads and the infrastructure
and the jobs that you’re seeking.
There are examples of this
around the world, but let me use one example from Africa: Botswana. When
diamonds were discovered in Botswana, the Botswana Government, the
then-president and the legislature, decided that they were not going to
let outsiders or corrupt insiders exploit what was the natural right to
the riches of their country of the people. So they created a legal
framework, and they required that any company wishing to do business in
the diamond industry had to provide significant revenue for the
Government of Botswana. They then put that money into an airtight fund.
And if you have ever been to Botswana, you can drive anywhere. The roads
are in excellent shape. You can drink cool water anywhere, because
every time you buy a diamond from DeBeers, some of that money you spend
goes to pave roads in Botswana. That’s what I want to see for Liberia.
(Applause.)
But before I leave this afternoon, at the airport I
will present equipment to help make the airport fully operational
again. (Applause.) In addition, our Transportation Security
Administration through its ASSIST program is working with the Liberian
Civil Aviation Authority, the airport, and the Bureau of Immigration to
ensure that the airport can meet international safety standards. This
will increase domestic and international flights, including those from
the United States. And I look forward to that day. (Applause.)
It’s
a particular honor for be to be addressing you, because I remember when
President Johnson-Sirleaf addressed our joint session of Congress when I
was sitting where you are sitting. (Applause.) (Inaudible.) Thank you. I
love that. I want to take him with me wherever I go. Thank you.
Excellent.
And I remember when the president described
Liberia as a land rich with rubber, timber, diamonds, gold, iron ore,
fertile fields, plentiful water, and warm and welcoming sunshine. That
paints a really beautiful picture. But even more beautiful are the
people of Liberia – (applause) – hardworking, resourceful, and
resilient, but damaged by years of conflict.
We can’t mince
words; you know that. In the briefing that I and my delegation received
from the minister of agriculture, I was stunned when she said there are
no livestock left. At the end of the conflict, anything that could be
eaten was eaten. People (inaudible) rebuilding agriculture, rebuilding
the tools that are needed for each individual to pursue his or her
destiny is what this is all about. The talent and resources exist here
(inaudible) overcome division, expand opportunities, and ensure that
prosperity is more broadly shared across society.
Some of you
have seen a film that tells the story of a Liberian woman’s efforts to
end the war. Tired of the killing and the conflict, she organized women
at her church and then other churches and in mosques until thousands of
Liberian women had joined a vocal, public movement demanding peace. I
remember meeting some of those women years ago. These were women who
woke up one day and said, “Enough, enough. We’re better than that.”
Mahatma
Gandhi said, “Be the change you want to see in the world.” He could
have been talking not just about these Liberian women, but about
everyone in this chamber who have determined to make Liberia’s story be
one of hope and opportunity.
I know that the suffering of the
people of Liberia has been broad and deep. But now, you each have a
chance, both personally and publicly through your service here, to make a
stand against the past and for a future that is worthy of the sacrifice
and the suffering that went on too long. The United States is proud to
support you. We are proud to be your partner and your friend, and we are
proud to work with you to realize the full potential of Liberia and its
people. God bless Liberia. (Applause.)