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Home » PYJ Takes Final Rest Today

PYJ Takes Final Rest Today

by Ellis Togba

Liberia: –The final journey of the late Nimba County Senator and political godfather, Prince Yormie Johnson comes to an end today, Saturday January 18, 2025 as  Nimba County.

As a mark of respect, thousands of Liberians as well as foreign nationals are in Ganta, Nimba County to form part of the solemn ceremony marking the funeral of the late Senator whose life was marred by controversies.

Liberians have been trooping in their numbers since Friday to attend the funeral service of the former warlord revered by his people as godfather for his role during the civil war.

President Joseph Nyuma Boakai, Vice President Jeremiah Koung, and many other statesmen including former President George Weah will form part of the funeral ceremony that bespeaks the late Senator’s nationalistic contributions to the country and people in many ways.

As per the itinerary released by the Johnson’s family and the Government of Liberia, his remains were taken from the Samuel Stryker Funeral Home to the Capitol Building for lied-in-state on Tuesday, January 14, 2025 from 10:00 AM – 4:30 PM.

His body in a glassy casket was escorted to the Capitol where national leaders, dignitaries, and the public paid tributes, remembering his incredible service to the nation as Senator since 2005.

Many recounted warmth relationships and moments shared with the deceased Senator during his life.

Former President George Weah remembered as a colleague who and him served on the Liberian delegation to the ECOWAS parliament when he (Weah) served as Senator of Montserrado County before his ascendancy to the Presidency in 2018.

The body of the late senator was later escorted to Christ Chapel of Faith Church for a night of wake-keeping on Wednesday, January 15, 2025 after which the remains were taken to Nimba County for series of ceremonies in his honor.

The body was also en route to Karnplay City where a wake-keeping while a tribute event was held in Saclepea City and additional tributes for lower Nimba residents took place on Thursday, January 16, 2025.

Public viewing of the late senator was held at the Gompa Football Field, honoring Senator Johnson’s legacy. On Saturday, January 18, 2025, the grand funeral service of Senator Prince Y. Johnson will take place at the PYJ University Auditorium. At this occasion, prayers, eulogies, and tributes will be held before his final burial ceremony.

The late Senator Prince Y. Johnson is one of Liberia’s longest-serving senators in the history of Liberia. While others considered him as a killer because of his role in the Liberian conflict, many other Liberians including Nimbaians regard the late senator as a hero who defended his county.

Prince Yormie Johnson (6 July 1952 – 28 November 2024) was a Liberian warlord and politician, who served as a senator for Nimba County from 2006 to 2024. Once a rebel leader, Johnson played a prominent role in the First Liberian Civil War.

After previously serving as an officer in the Armed Forces of Liberia, Johnson allied himself with Charles Taylor’s National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL) rebel group when it launched the First Liberian Civil War in 1989 to overthrow President Samuel Doe. Due to a rift with Taylor, Johnson soon formed an NPFL splinter group, the Independent National Patriotic Front of Liberia (INPFL), which captured, tortured and executed Doe in 1990.

Following continued clashes with Taylor and the pro-Doe ULIMO group, the INPFL was disbanded and Johnson was forced into exile in Nigeria in 1992, where he converted to Christianity and reconciled with the Doe family.

Johnson returned to Liberia in 2004 following the end of the Second Liberian Civil War and was elected to the Senate of Liberia in the 2005 Liberian general election. He founded a political party, the National Union for Democratic Progress (NUDP) in 2010, before being expelled from it in 2014. He then founded a new party, Movement for Democracy and Reconstruction (MDR) in 2016. He was thereafter re-elected to the Senate in 2014 and 2023. He was also an unsuccessful candidate for President in 2011 and 2017, respectively finishing in third and fourth place in the first round.

Early life

Johnson was born in Tapeta, Nimba County, in the east-central interior of the country, and was brought up by an uncle in the capital city of Monrovia. In 1971, while living in Monrovia, he joined the Liberian National Guard (LNG), which was transformed into the Armed Forces of Liberia (AFL) in the aftermath of Samuel Doe’s 1980 overthrow of President William R. Tolbert.

He rose to the rank of Lieutenant, receiving military training in both Liberia and the United States, where he was instructed in military police duties in South Carolina. A stern, often draconian, disciplinarian, he served as aide-de-camp to Gen. Thomas Quiwonkpa, the Commanding General of the Armed Forces of Liberia, and accompanied him into exile in 1983, after Quiwonkpa was accused of plotting a coup against Doe.

Johnson later allied with Charles Taylor as part of the National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL), serving as the NPFL’s Chief Training Officer. Taylor’s fighters crossed the border from Ivory Coast and began operations in Liberia on Christmas Eve, 1989.

Formation of the INPFL

An internal power struggle resulted in Johnson breaking off from the Taylor-led NPFL and forming the Independent National Patriotic Front of Liberia (INPFL). Despite intervention in the civil war by the Economic Community of West African States Monitoring Group (ECOMOG), INPFL forces captured most of Monrovia in the late summer of 1990.

During the civil war, Johnson was notorious for killing anyone who opposed or criticized his actions. When Hare Krishna devotees, who were distributing food to starving people in Monrovia in the midst of the chaos of the civil war, sent him a letter begging him to stop killing people, he personally orchestrated the murder of Hladini devi dasi-born Linda Jury-and five of her students on the bank of the Saint Paul River on the night of Thursday, 13 September 1990.

On 9 September 1990, Johnson’s supporters abducted President Samuel Doe from ECOMOG headquarters in the Monrovia port district. Doe was tortured and executed in Johnson’s custody on 9 September, with the spectacle videotaped and broadcast around the world. The video showed Johnson sipping a Budweiser beer and being fanned by an assistant as his men cut off Doe’s ear.

After Doe’s death Johnson briefly claimed the presidency of Liberia. Johnson’s claim to power ended following the consolidation of rebel power under Charles Taylor. In an attempt by the weak national government to reconstruct Liberian politics, the INPFL was recognized at a conference held in Guinea, where Amos Sawyer was elected president.

Johnson was forced to flee to Nigeria to avoid capture by rebel forces supporting Taylor and was not involved in the Second Liberian Civil War. He lived in Nigeria for 12 years. While in Nigeria, Johnson became a Christian and reconciled with the Doe family through the intervention of Nigerian pastor T. B. Joshua.

Johnson returned to Liberia in March 2004, following the resignation of Taylor as president and the installation of a transitional government. He stated his intention to return to politics, though he briefly left Liberia again on 7 April due to death threats he had received from the Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (LURD) rebel group. In the 2005 general elections, Johnson contested and won a Senate seat representing Nimba County. For a period he served as the chair of the Senate’s defense committee.

In the June 2009 final report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which was established as part of the 2003 peace deal, the TRC recommended Johnson’s inclusion on a list of 50 people who should be “specifically barred from holding public offices; elected or appointed for a period of thirty (30) years” for “being associated with former warring factions.” Johnson labelled the recommendation a “joke,” noting the absence of several other combatants from the list, and vowed to resist any charges brought as a result of the report.

Johnson ran in Liberia’s 2011 presidential election[18] as the candidate of the newly formed National Union for Democratic Progress party. He placed third, with 11.6% of the vote; the election was won by the country’s previous president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

By 2017, Johnson formed a new party, the Movement for Democracy and Reconstruction (MDR). Johnson contested the presidency with the party in the 2017 election. Johnson supported Coalition for Democratic Change (CDC) candidate George Weah in the subsequent run-off election. Weah was ultimately elected president.

On 9 December 2021, Johnson was sanctioned by the United States Department of Treasury for alleged political corruption, claiming he would sell votes in elections for financial gains.[24]

Towards the ending of 2022, Johnson withdrew his support for President Weah and the CDC. Johnson cited the lack of Nimba County representation in top appointed positions.[25] In December 2022, Johnson resigned as head of the MDR. In an MDR convention on 22 December, Senator Jeremiah Koung was elected standard bearer.

As standard bearer, Koung continued Johnson’s policy of opposing the CDC. In the 2023 Senate election, Johnson was re-elected with the MDR. Johnson died in a hospital in Paynesville, Montserrado on 28 November 2024, at the age of 72.

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