“Joke Project” Sparks Outrage: Salala District Lawmaker Accused of Gross Misprioritization in Development Initiative

Monrovia, Liberia – A controversial infrastructure project in Bong County’s Salala District has ignited a firestorm of criticism, exposing what many are calling a glaring misalignment between lawmakers’ priorities and constituents’ actual needs. The project, spearheaded by District #6 Representative Moima Briggs Mensah through the Liberia Agency for Community Empowerment (LACE), has become the center of a national debate about accountability, transparency, and responsible governance.

The Controversy Unpacked

At the heart of the uproar is what critics describe as a shockingly tone-deaf use of public funds. While Salala residents have repeatedly pleaded for basic necessities—functional schools, accessible healthcare, and clean water—their representative allegedly greenlit a project so questionable that NAYMOTE’s Eddie D. Jarwolo publicly branded it a “joke” and a “slap in the face” to the community.

“This isn’t just poor judgment—it’s a betrayal,” Jarwolo stated bluntly. “When you divert funds meant for life-changing development into a project nobody asked for, you’re not governing—you’re stealing from your own people.”

A Pattern of Neglect?

Residents say this isn’t an isolated incident but part of a wider trend of neglect.

Yet instead of addressing these crises, Rep. Mensah’s office allegedly pushed forward with a project that, based on circulating images, appears to be poorly constructed, minimally useful, and completely detached from the community’s stated needs.

The Bigger Problem: Liberia’s Broken Legislative Project System

This scandal has reignited a long-simmering debate about Liberia’s Legislative Support Project (LSP), a system meant to empower lawmakers to address local needs but which critics say has become a slush fund for political posturing.

What Happens Next?

Civil society groups, led by NAYMOTE, are demanding immediate investigations. Meanwhile, Salala residents are left wondering:

One thing is clear: Liberians are fed up. If leaders keep ignoring the people, the people will make themselves heard—one way or another.

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