GBARNGA, Bong County – On the muddy banks of the Jor River in Civil Compound, Gbarnga, barefoot kids chase each other alongside the trail the place a bridge was imagined to rise — a bridge many right here believed would change their lives endlessly. At this time, the place is silent apart from the murmuring of the present and the anxious questions of residents who nonetheless can’t perceive why the mission was stopped.
By Selma Lomax [email protected]
The 38-meter bridge, deliberate to attach Civil Compound, Brooklyn, Gboveh Hill, and Jorkpenmue, was an bold community-driven initiative led by the Residents Motion for Change (CMC) in partnership with Bong County District 3 Consultant J. Marvin Cole. Backed by CMC Political Chief Musa Hassan Bility, the bridge was meant to finish years of isolation for hundreds who depend upon the harmful Jor River crossing for college, commerce, and day by day survival.
However early this month, the Ministry of Public Works ordered a halt to the development, claiming the mission had already been “included within the nationwide price range.” The announcement shocked residents and angered neighborhood leaders, who say they’ve waited many years for a bridge that by no means got here — till now.
“Two Kids Drowned Proper There”
For Mary Meanto, a mom of 4, the Jor River isn’t just a physique of water — it’s a place of tragedy. She remembers the day two kids drowned whereas attempting to cross the river on a slippery log.
“There was once one huge tree log right here,” she says, pointing to the water. “Whenever you slip, that’s the top. My auntie’s kids — two of them — drowned proper there. We cried and cried, however no person from authorities got here. No one.”

Mary says the neighborhood rejoiced when CMC and Rep. Cole introduced in building supplies earlier this final month. “We thought our struggling was ending. We danced that day,” she recollects. “Now they are saying cease the work as a result of it’s in some price range. Which price range? We don’t see any bridge right here.”
She shakes her head. “We aren’t preventing the federal government. We’re begging. Let anyone construct it — whether or not it’s Musa Bility or the president himself. We simply desire a bridge.”
A Era Ready
For Oldma Saye, a gray-haired elder who has lived within the space for greater than 25 years, the halt seems like historical past repeating itself.
“I’ve seen guarantees come and go,” she says, leaning on her strolling stick. “When Musa Bility introduced cement and iron rods, that was the primary actual factor we noticed. Not simply discuss. Now the supplies are losing, and we’re again to the identical outdated story.”
She worries that one other era of kids will develop up stranded on reverse sides of the river. “When the water comes up, kids keep dwelling from faculty. They fail, they lose hope. Is that how a rustic grows?”
Her voice rises: “Let the federal government open its coronary heart. Allow them to not cease assist due to politics. This isn’t about crimson or blue social gathering. That is about folks.”
“We Have Waited Too Lengthy”
Benjamin V. Brown, a youth chief of Civil Compound, factors to the fenced-off space the place cement and iron rods lie idle beneath the rain. “All of the supplies are right here,” he says. “The vans got here, the employees had been prepared. Then all of a sudden Public Works mentioned the bridge is already within the price range. However nobody has ever seen that price range line. No go to, no plan, no survey — nothing.”
To Benjamin, the halt is greater than bureaucratic delay — it’s a betrayal. “We don’t need battle,” he says. “However authorities shouldn’t battle us both. When folks take initiative, it’s not politics. It’s partnership. Whenever you cease it, you cease progress.”
He pauses and provides quietly, “A bridge will not be about politics — it’s about life. Even these in energy will in the future use this identical bridge.”
“The River Doesn’t Know Social gathering Colours”
On the quiet building web site, Joe Davis, a trainer on the native public faculty, surveys the rusting rods and empty trenches. “Have a look at these supplies losing,” he says. “Even when the federal government says the bridge is within the price range, when will they construct it? Subsequent 12 months? After elections? By then, one other youngster might die right here.”
He sighs. “This bridge grew to become an issue as a result of it was an opposition-led initiative. However the river doesn’t know social gathering colours. When it floods, it floods everybody — CDC, CMC, or UP.”
Davis sees the mission’s suspension as symbolic of Liberia’s deeper governance downside. “That is how politics kills progress,” he says. “You cease a mission not as a result of it’s dangerous, however due to who began it. In the meantime, the folks undergo.”
A Group on Its Knees
As night falls, dozens of residents collect by the water. Some maintain placards studying “Let the Bridge Go On” and “Improvement Has No Social gathering.” They converse in unison, calling on the federal government to reverse its resolution.
“Our leaders say the bridge is already within the nationwide plan,” one man says. “If that’s true, then the place is it? Why have we waited so lengthy?”
To the folks right here, the bridge represents greater than a construction — it’s hope. A hyperlink to markets, faculties, hospitals, and alternative. A lifeline that politics has placed on maintain.
CMC Condemns Authorities “Resistance”
In the meantime, the Residents Motion for Change (CMC) Wednesday condemned the federal government’s motion, calling the halt a “deliberate try to stifle community-led growth” and a “discouraging show of political obstruction and bureaucratic insensitivity.”
CMC Chairman James M. V. Yougie mentioned the Ministry’s declare that the mission was already funded beneath the nationwide price range is “deceptive and politically motivated.”
“The federal government’s sudden declare that this bridge is a part of a nationwide price range plan will not be solely shocking however suspicious,” Yougie informed reporters. “There are barely two months left within the fiscal 12 months. There’s no document of this bridge within the price range or any announcement by Public Works about it.”

Based on Yougie, the one main street mission for Bong County within the 2025 price range is the Totota–Sanoyea street rehabilitation, “which has nothing to do with this bridge.”
“The Ministry requested us for technical paperwork, which we supplied. We adopted each process,” he mentioned. “Then all of a sudden, they claimed possession of a mission that by no means existed of their plan. That’s politics — not coverage.”
CMC accused the Ministry of turning growth right into a partisan contest. “As an alternative of embracing citizen partnership, the federal government has chosen to dam progress,” the group mentioned in an announcement. “If each neighborhood initiative is seen as opposition propaganda, how can the nation develop?”
The motion insists the bridge mission was by no means meant to compete with authorities applications however to enrich them. “Our aim was to attach folks, not divide them,” Yougie mentioned. “Rejecting a community-based mission beneath false claims solely hurts the individuals who depend upon it for survival.”

Public Works Minister Roland Layfette Giddings, in response, reiterated that his ministry retains sole authority to approve all public infrastructure initiatives, stressing the necessity for security and compliance with nationwide requirements.

However the CMC has accused the federal government of utilizing that argument as a political defend. “When atypical residents mobilize to repair what the state has ignored, authorities ought to applaud them, not punish them,” Yougie mentioned. “This resolution discourages civic participation and tells communities that their efforts don’t matter.”
“Simply Let It Occur”
As evening falls, the sound of speeding water grows louder. Standing as soon as extra by the riverbank, Mary Meanto grips her daughter’s hand and prepares to cross the identical slippery log her kin as soon as used.
“We’ve got begged sufficient,” she says softly. “Let the federal government construct it if they may. Let Mr. Bility construct it if he can. We don’t care who will get the credit score. We simply desire a bridge.”
She takes a cautious step onto the log — one foot, then one other — and begins the gradual, perilous stroll throughout, because the darkish water under whispers the identical plea: let the bridge go on.
As of publication, the Ministry of Public Works has not introduced when — or if — work on the Jor Bridge will resume beneath the nationwide price range. Supplies delivered by CMC stay in Siwa Compound beneath neighborhood watch, awaiting a call that would decide whether or not hope, as soon as once more, should wait.
