Amb Shoniyin Challenges Liberian Youth to Build Nation

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Amb Shoniyin Challenges Liberian Youth to Build Nation
Amb Shoniyin Challenges Liberian Youth to Build Nation

Africa-Press – Liberia. Amidst the government’s efforts, in a country grappling with unemployment, historical economic uncertainty, and a growing sense of impatience among its youthful population, a powerful and urgent message echoed through the 16th Global Leadership Summit: leadership cannot wait.

Taking the stage before a packed audience of students, young professionals, and emerging leaders, Amb. B. Elias Shoniyin delivered a stirring call to action, one that challenged deeply ingrained assumptions about power, opportunity, and national transformation.

“If you cannot lead where you are, you will not lead when you arrive,” he declared, his words cutting through the room with both clarity and conviction.

The summit, held under the theme “Lead Where You Are,” brought together a distinguished mix of local and international voices, including globally recognized leadership experts such as Craig Groeschel, Christine King, and Madam Eyvonne Bright-Harding. Their collective message centered on vision, discipline, and resilience as essential ingredients for leadership.

Yet, it was Shoniyin’s grounded, Liberia-focused message that resonated most profoundly.

He spoke directly to a generation often told to wait—wait for jobs, wait for opportunities, wait for political inclusion. But he rejected that narrative entirely, arguing that leadership is not defined by titles or positions, but by daily actions and personal discipline.

He urged young Liberians to begin leading in their classrooms, communities, churches, mosques, and social circles, spaces where character is formed, and influence begins.

“Liberia does not need more talk. Liberia needs action, and that action begins with you,” he emphasized.

In a nation striving to align its development ambitions with tangible outcomes, his message struck at the heart of Liberia’s historic leadership deficit: the tendency to aspire without preparation.

Shoniyin’s call is both simple and transformative; stop waiting for permission. Lead now.

As Liberia looks toward a future defined by economic growth and inclusive development, the responsibility, he reminded the audience, lies not in distant institutions, but in the everyday choices of its young people.

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