By Edwin N. Khakie
YASSATA, GUINEA / LIBERIA — Guinea and Liberia have taken one other step towards deeper cross-border cooperation as Guinean authorities praised Liberian improvement advocate Quanuquanei Alfred Karmue and Bong County Superintendent Loleyah Hawa Norris for advancing a key infrastructure initiative alongside their shared border.
The commendation adopted the completion of a neighborhood street linking Yassata, Guinea, to Liberia’s Dissaï hall, made attainable by the profitable switch of road-construction tools from Liberia into Guinea with official assist from each governments.
Guinea’s Minister of Pre-College Schooling and Literacy, Jean-Paul SEDY, described the mission as a people-driven effort that displays unity, peace, and regional partnership between the 2 neighboring nations.
He mentioned the motion of heavy tools throughout the border marked a historic second, applauding border communities for taking duty for improvement and restoring social and financial ties weakened by colonial boundaries.
Talking on the proposed website of the Joseph Nyumah Boakai (JNB) Unity Bridge in Karmue, Karmue linked the initiative to President Joseph N. Boakai’s imaginative and prescient of regional connectivity, noting that borders ought to join fairly than divide neighboring peoples.
Karmue recalled years of joint advocacy between Guinean and Liberian communities and mentioned with the street now accomplished on either side, the one remaining hyperlink is a everlasting bridge over the Nié River.
Representing the Liberian authorities, Superintendent Norris conveyed greetings from President Boakai and Vice President Jeremiah Koung, stressing that shared historical past, commerce, and household ties demand stronger cross-border hyperlinks.
Residents of Yassata and Dissaï welcomed the street mission. Nonetheless, they renewed requires the quick development of the JNB Unity Bridge, which they are saying would rework the world into an important financial lifeline and lasting image of unity between Guinea and Liberia.
