Liberia's
President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has suspended one of her sons from the
post of central bank deputy governor for failing to declare his assets,
her office has said.
Charles Sirleaf was among 46 officials suspended for not making the disclosure to anti-corruption officials, it said.
He was one of three sons appointed to top posts by his mother following her re-election last year.critics accuse Mrs Sirleaf, a Nobel Peace laureate, of nepotism.She has appointed her son, Fumba, as head of the National Security
Agency and another son, Robert, as a senior adviser and chairman of the
state-owned National Oil Company of Liberia (NOCAL).
Robert Sirleaf is suing two local newspapers - the Independent and
The Analyst - and opposition politician Jefferson Kogie for libel for
suggesting that he has benefited financially from the posts.
In a statement, Mrs Sirleaf's office said Charles Sirleaf and the
other 45 officials would remain suspended until they declared their
assets to the Anti-Corruption Commission.
Other suspended officials include the presidency's Chief of Protocol
David Anderson, Solicitor-General and Deputy Minister of Justice Micah
Wilkins Wright and Deputy Director General for Broadcasting Ledgerhood
Rennie.
Mrs Sirleaf, who took power in 2005 at the end of 14 years of
conflict, has repeatedly pledged to tackle corruption and to promote
good governance in Liberia.
She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize last year, shortly before she
was elected for a second term in polls marred by allegations of
widespread rigging.
Corruption remains a major obstacle to development in Liberia, where
most people live in poverty despite the country being rich in mineral
resources, analysts say.
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