The training brought together cross-section of 40 participants from the Young Political Leadership School, representatives from the Mandela Washington Fellowship Program, the Young African Leaders Initiative Regional Leadership Center, Mandela Institute for Development Studies (MINDS), the Youth Initiative for Advocacy, Growth and Advancement (YIAGA) fellows based in Liberia as well as participants from various universities in Liberia.
Mr. McCarthy Weh, Director of the Legislative Information Services at the Liberian Legislature, facilitated on the role and function of the House of Representatives Committees. Mr. Weh highlighted the legislative oversight functions and how is it planned and executed. He said there were 34 House committees with the power to inspect, examine, inquire into, and pass upon at least one report at each session on all matters within its jurisdiction and to hold such hearings and investigation, which the committee may find necessary. Mr. Weh said the Liberian Legislature, like other parliamentary bodies the world over, works principally through committees. The committees are considered the technical arms of the Legislature.
Director Weh however, said statistics available show that within the period 2006 to 2017, the Legislature acted upon 420 legislative instruments, including enactment of 128 laws; a total of 200 international instruments ratified; 94 Amendments and 3 Resolutions as recorded. “This is why we all have to concert effort as NAYMOTE doing and we are, at the LIS to vigorously monitor oversight/public hearings,” Weh said.
At the end of his facilitation participants developed a monitoring tool that will assist participants and NAYMOTE monitor, track, and report on legislative committees’ hearings and workings of the House of Representatives over the next six years.
NAYMOTE’s Program Director, S. Aaron Weah-Weah, III presented to participants a summary of the institution’s regional lesson learned report gathered from the 2017 Elections and recommendations made by youth leaders across the country to enhance youth’s civic engagement in post-elections governance in Liberia.
He said the institution has trained 10 enumerators to conduct 20 focus group discussions within 20 districts and 12 staffs to conduct survey using mobile phones across the 38 electoral districts. The survey is targeting 3,040 respondents. The information gathered will also be used to inform lawmakers’ legislative agenda over the next six years.