HISTORICAL NOTE
Liberia was created in 1847 by freed former American slaves, who bought the land from local chiefs. The descendants of these settlers, the so-called Americo-Liberians, held political power in Liberia until 1980, when the president was assassinated in a coup led by an army officer, Samuel Doe. While Doe's coup marked the end of the minority Americo-Liberians' dominance, it also ushered in a period of instability.
In coming to power, Doe suspended the constitution, but promised a swift return to civilian rule. In 1984, he allowed the return of political parties, and was elected as the nation's first indigenous president in 1985.
By the later 1980s, arbitrary rule and economic collapse culminated in a civil war. The dissidents of Charles Taylor's National Patriotic Front overran much of the countryside in 1989, and executed Doe in 1990. Fighting intensified as the rebels splintered, and fought each other, the Liberian army, and West African peacekeepers.
In 1995, a peace agreement was signed, eventually leading to Taylor's election as president. In 1999, Ghana, Nigeria and other governments accused Taylor of supporting rebels in Sierra Leone, while Taylor accused Guinea of supporting Liberian rebels in the North.
In 2000, government forces battled rebels around the town of Voinjama, and engaged in border fighting with Guinean forces, resulting in the displacement of thousands of people. In 2003, the conflict came to a head when Taylor, under international pressure to quit and hemmed in by rebels, stepped down and went into exile.
A transitional, power-sharing government was sworn in later that year to steer the country towards elections in 2005. |