New
Jersey Teacher to Become Liberia's First Female Chief of Police
From
the Feminist Daily News Wire, March 14, 2006
Beatrice Munah Sieh,
a 48-year-old native of Liberia, will soon become the African
country's first female police chief under newly elected
President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Africa's first democratically
elected female head of state. Sirleaf has pledged to
include more women in her government’s posts, and Sieh’s
confirmation by the Liberian Senate is expected, reports the
Associated Press.
Sieh, currently a middle school teacher in Trenton, New Jersey,
left war-torn Liberia in 1996 after working on the police force
for 18 years, as a member of the presidential escort, and as the
country’s first motorcycle cop, according to the Trenton Times.
After accusing Joseph Tate, police chief under former president
and warlord Charles Taylor, of corruption, Sieh’s home was
attacked with gunfire, though she was not at home at the time,
reports the AP.
Margaret Moore, the director of the National Center for Women
and Policing, said, "The NCWP welcomes the news of the
appointment of Beatrice Munah Sieh as the chief of police for
Liberia. Research has demonstrated that women respond more
effectively to crimes of violence against women, and it will be
important for the new chief to build a police force that
addresses these issues. Equally important for Chief Sieh
will be to build her vision of a new police service as one that
the community will trust and respect. We wish her well in
her new job."
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