Liberia: Temporary Employment Workers Reject Govt’s Offer to Settle Just One of 13 Months’ Salary Arrears

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Monrovia — Workers under the Temporary Employment for Community Youth (TECY) project have vowed to reject the Liberian government’s proposal to pay just one month of their reported 13 months’ salary arrears. The workers, frustrated by prolonged delays, are demanding full payment of the arrears owed to them.

On Monday, October 21, 2024, dozens of TECY workers staged a protest at the Capitol Building, blocking access to Vice President Jeremiah Kpan Koung’s office as they demanded their outstanding wages. The workers insisted on meeting with the Vice President directly, accusing Finance and Development Planning Minister Augustine Kpehe Ngafuan of misleading them by claiming that a three-member committee was working on a solution to their grievances.

TECY Secretary General Thomas Tweh informed a representative from VP Koung’s office that the group had made numerous attempts to resolve the issue diplomatically through the Ministries of Finance and Youth and Sports but had received no results.

This marks the second public protest by TECY workers since the Unity Party government took office. On September 30, 2024, the workers staged a similar demonstration outside the Ministry of Finance and Development Planning, blocking major roads in Monrovia in protest of the unpaid 13 months’ arrears they say the government owes.

The TECY project, launched in April 2022 under the former Coalition for Democratic Change (CDC) administration, replaced the Reclaiming Liberia Beaches and Waterways Project. The initiative aimed to provide employment for 1,100 vulnerable individuals across 14 slum communities in Montserrado County.