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FDA Shortcuts Community Forest Process for Logging

Top: The Mavasagueh Community Forest overlaps 3,200 acres of private land two individuals are claiming. New Narratives/James Harding Giahyue


By Emmanuel Sherman


Editor’s Note: This story is the first part of a series on the illegalities associated with a newly established community forest in Compound Two, Grand Bassa County.

VAMBO, Grand Bassa – One day in 2022, a logger visited Gblorso Town and asked elders to prospect their forest. The elders consented, and Clarence Massquoi found marketable timber species there, promising to return soon.  

Then Massaquoi disappeared and returned in October last year with a surprising message: His company, C&C Corporation (CCC), would break ground for the construction of a major road from BIA through Vambo and Marloi Townships in Compound Number Two, Grand Bassa County. CCC had signed a logging contract with the townspeople for 26,003 hectares of forestland in exchange for local development.

“The elders told him if you view the forest come back to us. He did not come back until last year October,” said Nathaniel Clarke, Commissioner of Vambo Township who helped organize a meeting between Massaquio and the community.

“I got a call from the development chairman asking me to go to [a place] because there is a company coming in there,” said Clarke.

The Commissioner was rightfully surprised. Evidence, backed by interviews with local people and forestry actors, shows the Forestry Development Authority (FDA) skipped legal steps in the Mavasagueh Community Forest’s formation. The evidence establishes that the FDA, CCC, and some community leaders rushed to enter contracts, ignoring several red flags.

The nine-step process, which made Mavasagueh a community forest, had begun in 2011 and ended in 2023. The forest covers 26,003 hectares and is owned by 39 communities across the Vambo and Marloi Townships. In August last year, locals entered a logging contract with CCC, a company established in 2022 and has no history of logging.

But a civil society review of Mavasagueh’s documentation last January reveals that the FDA did not do a good job. Seven organizations under the Community Forest Working Group (CFWG) found the process improperly documented and, that there was inadequate community awareness and participation.

The group also found that the community governance structure had not been established in line with the law, suggesting that civil society did not participate in Mavasagueh’s elections.

“Based on the final decision of the technical committee CFWG that reviewed the documents, it wasn’t clear whether CSOs that may have participated in those processes were member organizations of the CFWG,” said Jackson Nobeh, the committee’s facilitator in an emailed statement.

Nobeh’s comments were corroborated by Bonathan Walaka of the National Union of Community Forest Body, who said the group played no part in elections. Other organizations also deny participating, including the Sustainable Development Institute, which helped make the rules for community forestry.

There is no record the FDA fixed the issues. The regulator did not answer questions regarding the NGO’s assessment and other queries for comments in this story.

Not informed

The DayLight visited several of Mavasagueh’s 39 towns and villages, talked to townspeople, and attended four meetings between December and last month, confirming what the NGOs had unearthed.

FDA Managing Director Rudolph Merab signed a community forest agreement with locals in Grand Bassa, leapfrogging several legal steps on the way. The DayLight/Harry Browne

In the December meeting, citizens and elders said they were unaware of Mavasagueh’s formation and the logging contract.  

“We were not informed about the company coming into our township,” said Martha Vondleh, a representative of Togar Town to Mavasagueh’s assembly.

 “I have seen no document, we want to see the paper,” added David Key, a representative of Boo Town. He said he did not even know his role in the leadership. 

Townspeople accused Daniel Dayougar, Vambo’s former Commissioner of handpicking members of Mavasagueh’s community assembly. The assembly, representatives of forest-owning towns and villages, is the highest decision-making body in community forestry.

“He selected people he had influenced over,” said Alexander Weegar, a resident of Gblorso Town.

This is not the first time Dayougar has been accused of selecting community leaders. In 2020, Dayougar was similarly accused when he chose signatories to a bogus MoU for a road project in exchange for Vambo’s logs.

Clarence Massaquoi, the CEO and co-owner of C&C Corporation, signed a logging contract with locals in Grand Bassa for a community forest that overlaps a private land. The DayLight/Derick Snyder

Dayougar, now the liaison officer with CCC, denies any wrongdoing in the past or now, calling the accusation “false and misleading.”

“I believe people want to do things to spoil my reputation. The CAs from Vambo were sent by the dwellers, of their respective communities. Elders, chiefs, and youths were the ones who sent those people,” said Dayougar.

People in neighboring towns and villages said they did not play a required role in the demarcation and mapping of Mavasagueh’s area. Gblorso, Philip Town, and Reeves Town were among them. Interestingly, it was in Gblorso Town, where Massaquoi met the elders in 2022.

 In one of the meetings last January, Massaquoi apologized for not making the contract available and shared it with the elders four days later.

Controversial private land

The lack of participation and awareness was not the only problem with Mavasagueh. Reporters uncovered a land conflict involving the community and two families.

Khalil Haider resident of Buchanan, is claiming 3,200 acres of land between Noway Town and Jesse Town, along the St. John River. The DayLight obtained copies of Haider’s 1958 probated deed signed by the late President William V.S. Tubman, and other documents.  

In a November letter to the FDA, Haider informed the agency that he owned the land, about a fifth of Mavasagueh’s size.

CCC has begun harvesting despite about a fifth of its contract area overlapping private land. The DayLight/Emmanuel Sherman

“I have learned the logging company has already sent a survey team, and that your entity has the boundary of the area,” read the letter. “Enclosed is a copy of my deed and coordination of my property to determine if it falls within the company’s operation area.”

Haider might have compromised with Massaquoi. However, his claim proves that the FDA did not conduct demarcation and mapping properly, flouting its guidelines for creating a community forest.   

The guidelines—something USAID invested millions in—require the regulator to post notices in Mavasagueh and neighboring communities for at least 30 days at various levels of the process.  The guidelines also require the FDA to work with other government agencies to resolve claims—or re-conduct the process.  

The evidence shows that did not happen. Instead, the FDA asked Haider and Massaquoi to work together and iron out their differences. Managing Director Rudolph Merab called them for a meeting after Haider’s complaint, according to Haider and Massaquoi.

“I received a call from [Mr. Merab], stating that if I pursued it further, they would have to cancel everything until two to three years before anything,” Haider told The DayLight. He added he empathized with Massaquoi because CCC spent a lot of money paving over 15 kilometers of a major road in the community.

“Haider and I settled, and said he would work with the community and me so, the FDA should let the document be processed,” Massaquoi told a DayLight interview.

The evidence supports the men’s comments, as CCC has obtained a harvesting certificate and has begun felling trees in the rocky forest.

The guidelines aside, Merab’s mediation is unlawful. Community forests should not overlap private forestlands, and loggers are disallowed from conducting community forest operations on such plots.

By the National Forestry Reform Law, CCC will have to obtain a private use permit (PUP)—a logging right awarded for a private forestland—to operate on the 3,200 acres.

A PUP is, however, impossible at the moment. There is a moratorium on such contracts after it led to forestry’s biggest postwar scandal in 2013, where contracts for some 2.5 million hectares of forests were illegally awarded. Merab and Augustine Johnson, the FDA’s demarcation and mapping consultant, were involved in that scandal.

Amos Lewis claims the same 3,200 acres of land Khalil Haider claims in Vambo Township, Grand Bassa County. The DayLight/Derick Snyder

‘Fake deed’

Haider might have a so-called arrangement with Massaquoi but not with some elders.  Borbor Kaykay, an elder of a village that bears his name, contested Haider’s claim at a meeting last month. Haider and Kaykay fought after a series of verbal exchanges, according to our reporter, who witnessed the incident.

“He came and brought some paper and said he owned land up the mountain.  I told him, ‘You don’t have land here. I have been the elder here since 2002,’” explained Kaykay.

Meanwhile, another person is also claiming ownership of the 3,200 acres Haider claims. A resident of Marshall, Margibi, Amos Lewis is the late Paramount Chief Reeves’ stepson. Like Haider’s, Reeves’ deed, which the DayLight obtained, was signed in the Tubman era.

Lewis counterclaims that Haider’s late mother, Rosa Dillion, secured the land for the late Paramount Chief Reeves, not for herself as Haider claims.

“My name Amos Lewis is on the deed,” Lewis said. “Haider does not know anything about that land. He faked those things from his mother.”

Haider refuted Lewis’ side of the story, saying the late Reeves “surrendered the deed to my mother.”

Lewis said he would lodge a complaint with the FDA on Tuesday.


[Ojuku Kangar contributed to this report]

 This story was a production of the Community of Forest and Environmental Journalists of Liberia (CoFEJ).

Illegal Miner Sues Villagers, Exposing His Crimes

Top: Swah Creek, where Clutz has been dredging in Togar Town. Picture credit: An anonymous villager


By Emmanuel Sherman and Charles Gbayor


VAMBO, Grand Bassa County – The allegations in Lee Clutz’ lawsuit against villagers in Togar Town and Pastor Town are grave: armed robbery and terroristic threat.

The lawsuit alleges locals terrorized Clutz’ mineworkers with firearms and destroyed his properties, documents of the St. John River City Magisterial Court in Compound Two, Grand Bassa County, show. The documents say the villagers demolished an air tank, a light rope, nine pieces of washing rugs and other items valued over US$1,340.

Two Mondays ago, the villagers appeared in court but did not have the US$500 bond the court imposed on them so, the court extended the payment period to the following week.

“The law must take its course,” said Clutz in an interview with The DayLight outside the court.

While the case is about the villagers’ alleged offenses, it exposes Clutz’ illegal mining activities, a crime that equally carries a fine and a prison term.

The DayLight had tracked Clutz down at the courthouse and quizzed him over the incident—and his mining activities.  

Clutz’s information and those from the villagers paint a picture of deception, pollution, corruption and violence.

The machine sound

Last August, Clutz and the townspeople entered an agreement that allowed him to dredge a creek in their area for gold.

Lee Clutz, the miner who sued the villagers over his illegal mining activities was interviewed outside of court. The Daylight/Charles Gbayor

Vambo has a huge potential for the mineral, according to research conducted by the United States Geological Survey and the Ministry of Mines and Energy. The region hosts Mount Finley, a 350-meter-high mountain, which is part of a 400-kilometer region extending across the Sierra Leone border. Over the years, it has attracted a lot of artisanal miners—many of whom are illegal.

In exchange for dredging the creek, Clutz promised to build two handpumps to replace the creek. He would fix a major bridge in the area, and give the villagers L$5,000 each month he worked there.   

With the agreement in place, Clutz set up his dredge on the Swah Creek. The stream is a tributary of the St. John River, flowing through the Number Two District and is a source of water for several villages.

Clutz’ dredge, which comprised a water pump machine attached to a raft made from planks and blue plastic barrels, used a tube to suck mud from the bottom of a creek.  It pumped the muddy water to an inclined, rugged stage that trapped gold nuggets, dirtying the creek.

Despite the villagers living up to the agreement, Clutz failed to erect the handpumps as he had promised. He did not regularize payment of the L$5,000 nor fix the bridge. Throughout his four months of dredging, he made only two payments, the villagers said.  

The townswomen, after seeing they could not use the creek to even wash, complained to the town authorities.

Lee Clutz’ dredge polluted the Swah Creek, the only source of water for villages in Vambo Township, Grand Bassa County. Picture credit: An anonymous villager

“The water is dirty and some of us are getting sick from drinking [it],” Martha Vonleh, chair lady of Togar Town, told The DayLight.

So, the villagers drove Clutz from the towns but he did not leave the region completely. Instead, he set up another camp upstream in Bonwin nearby and resumed dredging.

That angered the villagers.  On the night of Decoration Day this year—March 13—the youth of the area ransacked his new waterfront goldmine.  

“We went to raid them and they saw our lights ran. So, we took all that they were working with and brought them to the town chief,” Elijah Darkenal said.

“We were 12 people that left that night to check on them. We went in Pastor town and told the other folks we heard machine sound,” he recalled.

Darkenal denies he and other villagers carried firearms.

Reporters visited the scene of the raid and saw the dredge machine on the muddy water, partly covered with rags. The raiders took pieces of equipment from the scene and carried them to Ezekiel Boima, the Town Chief of Togar Town.

The dredge machine on the Swah Creek at the raid scene photo, The Daylight/Charles Gbayor

The Daylight reporters saw a few items, including a big brown tub, washing rugs, back bags, rice, light rope, tarpaulin, pot, shovel and a gas tank.

Moratorium on dredging

Without naming Rufus Garkpah, the local mining official, and Abednego Mardeh, a patrolman, Clutz accused local mining authorities of sharing his gold but failing to protect him against the villagers.  

“The agents and other people are on the field collecting bills to enable us to [dredge] in our Liberian setting. They are collecting money from us,” Clutz said.

These are a few of the items the reporters saw in Togar Town taken from the scene of the raid, Photo: The DayLight/Charles Gbayor

Clutz called on the Ministry of Mines to lift a moratorium on dredging to prevent mining representatives from exploiting miners. The moratorium was meant to curb the pollution of water bodies countrywide and the degradation of the rural environment.

“I want the government to legalize it for… all Liberians to benefit from the resources than to enrich individuals,” Clutz added.

That was the second time Garkpah was directly or indirectly mentioned. The villagers in Togar Town said Mardeh had introduced Clutz to them on Garkpah’s behalf. Mardeh even attended meetings between them and Clutz.

“Clutz came to me along with Mardeh and said he wanted to dredge the water. So, I told him I will inform the surrounding villages that drink from the Swah Creek, including Pastor Town and Jerome Karngoun Town,” said Ezekiel Boima, Elder of Togar Town.

One of four dredge machines reporters saw on the banks of the St. John River in an open area impossible for local mining officials not to spot. The Daylight/Charles Gbayor

Mardeh’s presence at the courthouse appears to support the villagers’ accusations. Reporters saw Mardeh enter the clerk’s office. Later, Ernest Gblorso, the chairman of Vambo Township Development Association, said Mardeh had come to plead for the townsmen.  

Mardeh denies any wrongdoing.

He admitted he attended meetings between Clutz and the townspeople with Garkpah’s consent.  However, the meetings were not for dredging, but rather a small-scale mining that uses handheld tools. “We never talked about dredging,” Mardeh said in a phone interview.

His comments are not backed by facts. Clutz has never acquired a legal mining license before, at least not in his name. Also, Mardeh sidestepped why he did not take any action against Clutz for dredging. Mining without a license carries a penalty of up to a US$2,000 fine, a two to three-month prison term, or both.

Like Mardeh, Garkpah denies the accusations against him. He said he had not seen Clutz since this year, and that he only sent Mardeh at the court to witness the proceedings.

At the court hearing last Tuesday, the villagers failed to secure a bond.  However, the elders are pleading with Clutz to withdraw the case and settle it in the town, where it all started.


The United States Embassy provided funding for this story. The DayLight maintained editorial independence over the story’s content.

‘I Used to Push Drugs on Mines’

Miners work in a mine at Noway Camp, Vambo during a gold rush in 2014. The DayLight/KK

Top: Miners at a goldmine in Vambo, Grand Bassa County. The DayLight/ K.K.


By Emmanuel Sherman


MONROVIA – Johnny John’s (not his real name for security reasons) pregnant girlfriend was close to labor, so he had to intensify his daily hustle. Unemployed and the sole breadwinner for his two-person family at the time, life was an uphill climb for the 25-year-old.  But all of that changed when he met this Nigerian drug smuggler.  

“He called me and said, ‘My man I sell drugs.  We can operate and you can get something for yourself so when your girl gives birth you get some money,’” John tells The DayLight on a car bound for Compound Number One, Grand Bassa County.

“So, myself, I started it.”

Nigerians are infamous for drug smuggling in Liberia. In 2018, for instance, 10 out of 13 drug trafficking cases involved a Nigerian, according to the Liberia Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA). Nearly a dozen Nigerians have been arrested or prosecuted between 2009 and this year, according to our analysis of several news stories and reports within that period.

John was a little bit nervous on his first mission. He knew the risk involved in this illegal transaction. The police would arrest him if he was caught and he could spend some time in jail.

“I was scared. I started it in Duport road, down Duport road…there is a ghetto there,” John says.

But his fears soon vanished. All of his drugs or “parcels,” as he calls them, were sold. Duport Road was the best place for a starter. The infamous slum is a hub for illicit drugs and criminal activities.

John’s debut was amazing as he pushed L$20,000 worth of heroin and received a L$4,000 commission from his Nigerian boss. His boss knew that he had become fearless in the operation and was excited about it.

That night his girlfriend was happy about the money he took home but she did not know how he got it.  He kept it a secret.    

John would go on to have several other successful missions after his inaugural operation on Duport Road. There were three on the Old Road, five in the Gobachop market, and countless times in the Red-Light area. Now it was time to venture outside of Monrovia, into the goldfields, the main market of his Nigerian boss. 

John started with a goldmine called “Philadelphia” in Grand Gedeh County. It would lead him to other mines across the country such as at Sand Beach in River Cess, “New York” in River Gee, and Kinjor in Grand Cape Mount. If the open ghettoes in Paynesville offered him an opportunity, the canopy of the forest presented a perfect hideout.

Crossing checkpoints were John’s new worry. In the Paynesville area, he did not have to cross them. However, he was prepared for it. His boss had connections that proved useful in a number of instances.

The checkpoint between Nimba and Grand Gedeh was always a tough nut to crack. The officer often asked the passengers to disembark the vehicle and checked their loads. One time, he nearly got caught. An Officer of the Liberia Drug Enforcement Agency (LDEA) asked for the owner of the bag of rice he was carrying. John thought that was the end, but he managed to compose himself.

“I told him I was carrying it up the mine for my people,” he told The DayLight, revealing he often camouflaged the banned substance in legitimate goods.   

“We stuffed them in bags of rice, fufu. The rice is something to eat, but sometimes I gave it out. I just want my market to land in the place. I only care for the market.”

Once he crossed all the checkpoints on the route to a particular destination took a motorcycle taxi, something that is predominantly used for transport in the rural parts of the country. The drivers are famed for riding in rough terrains. That profile makes it gel well with the bush routes leading to goldfield and diamond creeks across the country.  

John’s sales justified his risk, fetching him between  LD$200,000 or LD$300,000 worth of drugs.   

“Drug is not something for credit. As soon as you give it to a person; the person gives you your money,” he tells me.

Drug users smoke heroin at a goldmine in Kaquekpo, Sinoe County in 2017. New Narratives/James Harding Giahyue

Individual miners made John’s clients list but mine owners were his biggest business partners. Artisanal mineworkers say heroin stimulates them. Known among drug pushers and users as “tar,” heroine is a very addictive drug, responsible for the huge number of disadvantaged youths or “zogos.”

“If I don’t take it, I can’t work,” said one drug user at a goldmine in Kaquekpo, Sinoe County in 2017. It can make me do the gold work perfectly, 24 hours, day and night, no resting.”  

Mine owners encourage drug dealers on their claims in a bid to enhance productivity. A 2016 USAID-funded report by the Foundation Against Illicit Drugs and Child Abuse found that mine owners and mine workers even exchange gold for illicit drugs.

John’s favorite goldmine was kinjor in Grand Cape Mount, a region that has a huge potential for gold, and is home to many artisanal goldfields. It is renowned for hosting the New Liberty Goldmines, Liberia’s first industrial gold project. On one operation, he sold half of a million Liberian dollars.

“My phone used to ring like [Minister of Finance and Development Planning] Samuel Tweah,” John says, bursting into a huge laughter.

At that point, Johns’s family status had well improved. He was no longer worried about “how to start his day.” His newborn daughter was now three years old and was now at one the best schools in Congo Town. Her mother, his girlfriend was doing a lucrative business. He gave out money easily and threw parties almost regularly.

John’s lavish lifestyle did not go unnoticed. His relatives and friends became concerned. The news finally hit them that he was one of the most prolific drug pushers. Occasional visits to his house by notorious drug users made things even worse for him and open recognition by zogos was too much of a coincidence. His relatives advised him and he heeded.  

“I get my children. I don’t want them to hold me accountable” [for destroying other people’s children’s future],” Johns says. “I feel guilty, but I don’t have the financial support to assist the people whose lives I helped destroy.”  

Bassa Officials Apply Illegal Logging MoU Despite FDA Rebuke

Banner Image: A portion of the newly paved road in Vambo, Grand Bassa County. The DayLight/Ojuku S. Kangar, Jr


BY Ojuku S.Kangar

VAMBO, Grand Bassa County – An illegal memorandum of understanding that will see a company pave a dirt road through two townships in District #2, Grand Bassa County, in exchange for logs, is proceeding despite the disapproval of the Forestry Development Authority (FDA).

Last year, officials of the county signed the MoU with African Trades Entrepreneur Enterprise Incorporated.  They agreed for the company to pave the 75-kilometer road through Vambo and Marloi and harvest logs within 1.5 meters on each side of the road. Representative Mary Karwor, Superintendent Janjay Baikpeh, District Superintendent Nancy Green, Commissioner Daniel Dayougar (Vambo) and Commissioner Amos Joe (Marloi) signed the MoU.

The FDA launched an inquest into the bogus deal as it breaches forestry laws and regulations. However, last month, the company and the county leadership moved ahead with the project, with about 60 percent already completed and the company poised to begin logging when the project reaches Noway Camp.

“The people of Vambo will pay for the dusty road construction with their natural resources,” Dayougar told The DayLight in an interview at his home in Jersey Town. “Operation should have started last year May and ended 2022 but did not due to Covid-19 outbreak. It starts 2021 and ends 2023.

District Superintendent Green told this reporter that there will be a mass meeting in the township to discuss the MoU before African Trade begins felling logs. That was exactly what Dayougar said July last year, which has yet to happen.  

Vambo and Marloi are not authorized forest communities and cannot go into a logging agreement. Vambo has applied for community forest status but is still on boundary harmonization, the fifth stage of a rigorous, nine-step process to achieve that. Furthermore, African Trade has no record of logging in Liberia. The company gave away its only legal logging contract to Renew Forestry Group in Grand Bassa District B and C Community Forest, a deal that has plunged  that community into continued chaos.

Atty. Gertrude Nyaley, the technical manager of the community forest department of the FDA, told the DayLight she knew nothing about the Vambo MoU. That was exactly what she said 10 months ago when FrontPage Africa broke the news of the illegal MoU. She said the FDA would lead a team of investigators to the township this week.

“This is an interesting development and speaks volumes to the continuous meddling in community forest activities by county authorities,” Nyaley said at the time. “This situation has plagued community forest activities across the country and complicates the work of the FDA.”

Baikpeh did not respond to email queries, follow-up messages and phone calls for comment on the matter. He did not also respond to Front Page Africa when they broke the story. However, he defended the bogus MoU on “Forest Hour” on Okay FM, arguing it would bring development to one of Bassa’s remotest communities. 

Karwor also did not respond to mobile calls and follow-up messages on the deal. Effort by Varney Kamara, The DayLight’s legislative correspondent last week, did not also materialize.  She did not also respond to FrontPage Africa last year when it sought her comment on the controversial deal.

Amos Sweegaye, African Trade’s CEO, eluded all attempts to be interviewed on the matter. He had agreed to speak to The DayLight on Friday at the FDA headquarters in Whein Town, Paynesville but called off the appointment in the last minute.

‘Dark Days’

Opposition to the MoU is rife in Vambo. Chiefs and elders said they did not make any inputs into the agreement and many have not even seen it. The parties to the deal agreed not to pay relocation package for residents whose houses and crops will be destroyed during the pavement.

“If the company feels it has government’s backing and look down upon us, it must enlarge the jail house at this time because many Vambo citizens will go to jail or die for their natural resources,” said Nathaniel Clark, the co-chairman of Vambo Development Association.

A log felled by the African Trades Entrepreneur Enterprises Inc. in Vambo, Grand Bassa County. The DayLight/Ojuku S. Kangar,

“We declared the deal bogus since last year because it has no royalty for the forest and its citizens,” said Ernest Gblorso, the chairman of the association. “The company will not dictate to us or force development on us.”

An attempt by workers of the company to go in the forest and start logging or mining without conveying a meeting with us… will be the beginning of dark days in Vambo territory,” said Elder Jacob Cee of Gbeewillie Town.

Dayougar said the people who are against the MoU “are those who are not residents or citizens of Vambo and do not want development.”

Vambo has no schools, clinics, safe drinking water and roads. People carry sick people and women in labor in hammock to the  Buchanan highway, a five-hour walk. Farmers struggle to take the goods to the market. Many of the its children of school-going age have not sat in a classroom.

Some residents support the road construction, saying it will relieve their suffering.

“We are tired toting load on our heads every market day,” said Lacy Davis of Boe Town. “If the road had not come this year, I would have gone to my children in District #3 to live there because I am tired suffering.”

“We will ride regular motorbikes to go home because of the road,” said Ellen Brown of Togar Town. No more walking for hours.”

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