President Sirleaf Welcomes US Peace Corps Return to Liberia

Thursday, 26th June 2008
Monrovia, Liberia - President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has welcomed the return of the American Peace Corps Volunteers Program. The Program, which operated in Liberia from 1962 to 1990, will recommence in September 2008.

According to a dispatch from the Peace Corps Press Office in the United States of America, the return was made possible during a meeting held between Presidents George W. Bush and Ellen Johnson Sirleaf in October 2007. President Johnson Sirleaf has expressed the hope that the overall focus of the volunteers must be education. The dispatch further disclosed that the return of the Peace Corps Volunteers is based on the period of peace in Liberia.

The Liberian leader has also commended the United States government’s decision to re-open the Peace Corps Volunteers Program in Liberia. The President added that the Program in the past was involved in every facet of Liberia’s development efforts, including education, health, agriculture and rural development.

The Peace Corps Volunteers are expected to operate a program known as “Peace Corps Response,” which will allow experienced volunteers to serve for short periods to perform high-impact work such as raising the capacities and capabilities of Liberian teachers. This will invariably have a profound impact on civil society, Peace Corps administrators believe.

The Director of Peace Corps Volunteers, Mr. Ron Tschetter, says the Peace Corps is pleased to note that there are many positive developments in Liberia, especially the renewed focus on education. He further pledged his Program’s commitment to Liberia’s national recovery.

This year the United States Peace Corps Volunteers Program is celebrating a 47-year legacy of service at home and abroad. Presently there are 8,000 volunteers abroad. Since 1961, more than 190,000 volunteers have helped promote a better understanding between Americans and the people of the 139 countries volunteers have served, including Liberia.