Six years after a civil war that killed 250,000 and displaced hundreds of thousands more, justice is at the top of Liberia’s list of needs. But in this small West African country of 3.5 million, the problem isn’t a lack of courtrooms or trained lawyers. Liberia is wanting for the actual laws themselves. The country’s legal code doesn’t exist in print except for a few mismatched volumes here and there, sequestered in incomplete sets in libraries in the capital, Monrovia. And right now, as far as legal advocates can tell, even Liberia’s national parliament doesn’t have a full copy of the law.
Read Full Article Off-Site