Ex-footballer George Weah faces his toughest challenge
An inspiration on the pitch, Liberia's new president George Weah could struggle to meet expectations off it, writes Fergal Keane.
An army band is playing on the far side of the field, the jaunty strains of ragtime float through the dead heat of the morning. It is Monrovia in the dry season and we are gasping, airless under the climbing sun and waiting for President-elect George Weah.
When he arrives the former professional footballer is dressed in the red kit of the George Weah All-Stars and is preparing to lead a team of his friends against a selection from the armed forces.
When I last visited Liberia in 2003, the warlords and military men had made the country a byword for anarchy. Desperate civilians were piling their dead in front of the US embassy to try to force an international intervention.
Now, at an army base in the capital, I am watching a democratically elected leader stroll out on to a football pitch to play against soldiers, who clearly hold him in awe.
For the first time in over 70 years Liberia is experiencing the peaceful transfer of power from one elected leader to another.
Mr Weah made his name as a star of European football at clubs like Monaco, Paris St Germain, AC Milan, Chelsea and Manchester City.
For much of this time his home country was consumed by vicious civil war. Fourteen years after the war ended, and after a previous failed attempt, George Weah eventually triumphed in presidential elections last October.
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