Due Process Is Not Optional It Is Mandatory

0
Due Process Is Not Optional It Is Mandatory
Due Process Is Not Optional It Is Mandatory

Africa-Press – Liberia. THE SUPREME COURT of Liberia has done what the Boakai administration should have done months ago: uphold the Constitution and respect the rule of law. In a decisive ruling, the Court ordered the immediate reinstatement of Dr. Dougbeh Christopher Nyan as Director General of the National Public Health Institute of Liberia (NPHIL), declaring his removal unconstitutional and in clear violation of statutory due process.

DR. NYAN IS not just any public official. A world-class epidemiologist and biomedical researcher, he has led Liberia’s response to the Mpox outbreak and other public health emergencies with skill, courage, and innovation.

HE IS THE inventor of the US-patented “Nyan-Test,” capable of rapidly diagnosing multiple deadly pathogens, and his work earned international acclaim. Yet, despite his achievements, the Executive Branch dismissed him over vague claims of “gross inefficiency” and acts “undesirable to public interest”—without a single lawful investigation to substantiate these allegations.

THE COURT’S RULING exposes what has long been apparent: the Boakai administration attempted a summary dismissal under the guise of governance reform. Dr. Nyan was given only 48 hours to respond, and his rebuttal was ignored. Prior disciplinary reports, already addressed through suspensions, were recycled to justify permanent removal. In short, Dr. Nyan was punished twice for the same conduct—a clear violation of both statutory and constitutional safeguards.

JUSTICE WOLOKOLIE REMINDED the nation that tenured officials enjoy contractual protections and cannot be removed without due process. “Due process is a law which hears before it condemns,” she wrote. The message could not be clearer: executive authority has limits, and arbitrary political power ends where the Constitution begins.

FOR THE BOAKAI administration, this is more than a legal setback—it is a political and moral rebuke. It underscores a troubling pattern of sidelining professional expertise for expediency and highlights a disregard for institutional integrity. If Liberia’s public health institutions are to function effectively, leaders must respect the rules that govern their tenure, not bend them for convenience.

FOR DR. NYAN, the ruling is vindication and restoration. He now has the right to resume leadership at NPHIL or receive full compensation for the remainder of his tenure. More importantly, it reinforces his reputation as a principled leader whose work and expertise transcend politics. Liberia’s health sector—and the nation—cannot afford to lose such talent to political maneuvering.

THIS CASE IS a clear warning: procedural shortcuts, political whims, and executive overreach will no longer be tolerated. The judiciary has spoken, and its voice resonates beyond Dr. Nyan’s reinstatement. It reaffirms the Constitution, protects tenured officials, and strengthens public confidence in governance.

LIBERIA CANNOT BUILD strong institutions with leaders who fear the sword of political expediency more than the rule of law. Wrongful dismissals must carry consequences. In this case, justice has prevailed.

DR. NYAN HAS been exonerated, and the Boakai administration has been reminded that in Liberia, due process is not optional—it is mandatory.

For More News And Analysis About Liberia Follow Africa-Press

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here