‘Koon’s Apology to Journalists Not Enough’ -Gongloe Says ‘Liberia Deserves Better’

MONROVIA – Liberia’s human rights advocate, Cllr. Tiawan Saye Gongloe, has slammed Speaker Richard N. Koon’s apology for threatening to order the arrest of journalists, calling it insufficient.

In a scathing commentary, Gongloe said the apology does not erase the abuse of power and that Speaker Koon’s actions reveal a deep intolerance for dissent and press freedom.

Gongloe emphasizes that threatening journalists is not a minor mistake, but a constitutional violation that undermines Liberia’s progress towards democracy.

He warns that such intimidation has a painful history in Liberia, citing the jailing of journalists like Tuan Wreh and Albert Porte, and the silencing of opposition voices during the country’s most repressive years.

The human rights advocate urged Speaker Koon to commit to respecting press freedom and upholding the law, rather than simply apologizing.

He outlined six steps for Koon to demonstrate his commitment, including publicly committing to never threaten journalists again, respecting constitutional rights, and studying the Kamara A. Kamara Law.

Gongloe stresses that Liberia has suffered greatly from intolerance and that it’s time to move forward, not backward.

He asserted that a better Liberia is possible, one where journalists are free, the law is respected, and leaders model the democracy they claim to build.

See full text of Gongloe’s COMMENTARY BELOW.

COMMENTARY

SPEAKER KOON’S APOLOGY IS NOT ENOUGH — LIBERIA DESERVES BETTER

By Cllr. Tiawan Saye Gongloe

Human Rights Advocate & Defender of Free Speech for Over 30 Years

Liberia woke up to headlines that Speaker Richard N. Koon has apologized to journalists for threatening to order their arrest. Some government officials are already praising him as if an apology erases the abuse of power.

Let us be clear:

Apology is not enough.

Threatening journalists is not a small matter. It is a constitutional violation, an unlawful act, and a dangerous step backward into a past that Liberia must never revisit.

HISTORY WARNED US—AND WE MUST LISTEN

This kind of intolerance and bigotry is not new in Liberia. It has a long and painful history: It is this same attitude that put journalist Tuan Wreh in jail; that sent Pamphleteer Albert Porte to jail many times; that imprisoned Stanton Peabody, Isaac Bantu, Kwame Clement, Cyrus Bad, and many other journalists; that led to the jailing, beating, silencing, and sometimes killing of journalists, student activists, labor union leaders, and opposition voices during Liberia’s most repressive years.

Every time a government official threatens the press, Liberia remembers the imprisonments, the crackdowns, the fear, the intimidation, and the voices that disappeared forever.

Is that where we want to go again?

Threats are not harmless. They are the first signs of tyranny.

ANGER REVEALS CHARACTER — AND THIS ONE DID

Speaker Koon did not merely “misspeak.”

He revealed his mind-set.

He exposed a deep intolerance for dissent and for the press.

He showed: Disbelief in press freedom; Ignorance of constitutional limits, Forgetfulness of the laws repealed in 2018; and complete disregard for Liberia’s painful history with oppression.

THE LAW HAS SPOKEN — AND HE VIOLATED IT

Speaker Koon swore an oath to uphold the Constitution. His threat violated that oath.

Article 15(c) of the Constitution:

There shall be no limitation on the public right to be informed about the government and its functionaries. How can journalists inform the public when the Speaker threatens to arrest them? The Kamara A. Kamara Act of 2018

This law abolished criminal speech offenses.

It strengthened press freedom.

It forbids the very thing the Speaker threatened.

By his conduct, the Speaker violated both constitutional and statutory guarantees.

That is dishonorable conduct from the head of the House of Representatives.

APOLOGY WITHOUT COMMITMENT IS EMPTY

If the Speaker truly regrets his actions, he must:

1. Publicly commit never to threaten journalists again;

2. Respect the constitutional rights of all Liberians;

3. Uphold the dignity of his office;

4. Read and understand Article 15(c);

5. Study the Kamara A. Kamara Law;

6. Demonstrate a conduct worthy of the Speaker of the “Honorable” House.

A simple apology does not restore damaged trust.

Only a commitment to lawful behavior can.

DEMOCRACIES DO NOT TOLERATE SUCH MISCONDUCT

Elsewhere in the world: In the UK, a minister resigned for insulting a police officer—a smaller offense; In Germany, a minister left office for trying to influence media content; and

In the US, officials who threaten journalist freedoms face public backlash and legal scrutiny.

What Speaker Koon did would be intolerable in any serious democracy.

Why should Liberia accept less?

A MESSAGE TO MR. SPEAKER

Mr. Speaker, Liberia has suffered greatly because of intolerance. We buried those old habits in 2018 when the Legislature repealed the anti-speech and anti-press laws.

Do not resurrect what Liberia destroyed.

Heal the wound you created by committing to never threaten journalists again.

The House you lead is called Honorable House of Representatives —your behavior must reflect it.

LIBERIA WILL NOT GO BACKWARD

Liberians have endured too much to tolerate new threats from old mindsets.

Backward never. Forward ever.

A better Liberia is possible—one where journalists are free, the law is respected, and leaders model the democracy we claim to build.

Let the press do its work.

Let democracy breathe.

Let Liberia move forward—never back into the darkness.

Please follow and like us: