By Nyema Nma, Jr.
On Wednesday, January 25, Monrovia, Liberia’s capital was a place of pandemonium when Montserrado County District 10 lawmaker, Yeke Kolubah, stormed the streets with several motocyclists joining his convoy and honking their bikes as they rode through the principal streets of Monrovia.
At about 12 noon, Kolubah parked his private vehicle at the corner of Benson and Gurley Streets, got on a bike and began the tour of the capital chanting pro-opposition slogan.
The representative said that “it was his way of identifying with the cyclists whom he described as stakeholders in the body politics of Liberia.”
“I’m here today to identify with my brothers and want to ensure that they are not to mislead their vote for the wrong people. I will always do it because they need to be reminded that they have a part to play in the upcoming elections,” Kolubah said.
“These people are serious stakeholders in the body politics of our country, but most of us would only identify with them when they need their votes. But for me, I have always been with them,” the District 10 lawmaker intimated.
Many persons have however critized Kolubah for disturbing the peace of the city and parts adjacent, when he should have been at the Capitol making laws that would impact all motocyclists he was riding with in the city. Kolubah who is described as a critical voice against the Weah-led government has given both Boakai and Cummings an ultimatum of three months to settle their differences or decide who to vote in the ensuing elections