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Ex-central bank officials plead not guilty in graft scandal in Liberia

Ex-central bank officials plead not guilty

A general view taken on September 27, 2017 shows the Central Bank of Liberia, Monrovia. (Photo by CRISTINA ALDEHUELA / AFP)

Five former Liberian central bank officials, including an ex-president’s son, have pleaded not guilty to charges of money laundering and “economic sabotage” in a scandal considered to be over millions of dollars of newly printed cash.

A court in Monrovia, the capital city, said the group – accused of printing surplus banknotes worth 2.6 billion Liberian dollars without authorisation – all asserted their innocence on Monday.

Liberia’s President George Weah vowed to tackle corruption when he came into office in January 2018 but has recently faced protests from citizens angry about graft, living standards and spiralling inflation.

The former deputy governor of the Central Bank of Liberia Charles Sirleaf (C), the son of Liberia’s former president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, is escorted outside the City Court of Monrovia on March 4, 2019, where he appeared in court and charged with economic sabotage following a probe into missing banknotes. – Charles Sirleaf and two other senior figures at the Liberian Central Bank were due in Court March 4 following a probe into missing banknotes. Two of them were detained just hours after independent investigators dismissed rumours that a haul of newly-printed cash that should have been put in the national reserves had gone missing. (Photo by Zoom DOSSO / AFP)

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The Central Bank of Liberia is at the centre of a probe into the cash – materialised between 2016 and 2018 – which prosecutors say the ex-officials cannot account for. Charles Sirleaf, son of former president and central bank chief Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, is among the five indicted on charges that also include criminal conspiracy.

What exactly happened to the money remains unclear, with a report by a foreign investigative agency Kroll Associates saying the money arrived at the central bank but that there were failings at each stage of the process.

Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Liberia’s president between 2006 and 2018, is a joint winner of the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize for her work on women’s rights during the country’s civil war.

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