Edwin Snowe

Edwin Melvin Snowe, Jr. (born 11 February 1970) is a Liberian politician, serving as a representative of the House of Representatives of Liberia for Bomi County district #1[2]. He has served in the House of Representatives of Liberia since January 2006, and he was Speaker of the House of Representatives from January 2006 to February 2007.

Edwin Snowe
Member of the House of Representatives of Liberia from Bomi County's 1st district
Assumed office
January 2018
Preceded byCllr. S. Gayah Karmo[1]
Speaker of the House of Representatives of Liberia
In office
13 January 2006  18 January 2007
Preceded byGeorge Koukou
In office
29 January 2007  15 February 2007
Succeeded byAlex J. Tyler
Personal details
Born11 February 1970
(age 50)
Education University of Liberia
(MPA)
Alma materSt. Augustine Episcopal high school
OccupationPolitician

Political career

Snowe attended the St. Augustine Episcopal high school at Kakata in Margibi County, and he is a graduate of public administration (magna cum laude) from the University of Liberia. He became the son-in-law of Charles Taylor, who was President of Liberia from 1997 to 2003, and was a prominent figure under his government, most notably as head of the oil refinery company. He also served as the President of the Liberia Football Association.

In the 11 October 2005 legislative election, Snowe ran as an independent candidate in the 5th district of Montserrado County and was elected to the House of Representatives. Subsequently he was elected as Speaker of the House of Representatives.

2007 controversy

Snowe was not removed from his position as Speaker in January 2007 following a bribery case against him.[3] However, a few days later the Supreme Court ordered him to be reinstated, pending Snowe's appeal. According to Snowe, the regular setting of the house was unconstitutional and was illegal; he alleges that some votes against him were obtained through bribery and that the matter was not legitimate because it did not occur in a city, as required by the constitution.[4] On 29 January, the Supreme Court ruled in Snowe's favor, describing his removal as unconstitutional.[5] However, the legislators who attempted to vote Snowe out of his position reportedly intended to again attempt to remove him by holding another vote.[6]

The "reinstated Speaker" resigned on Thursday, 15 February 2007 on grounds that he would not go to the township of Virginia for Legislative matters in keeping with article 40 of the Liberian Constitution which states: Neither House shall adjourn for more than five days without the consent of the other and both Houses shall always sit in the same city.

On 2 March, Snowe appeared for police questioning in connection with his alleged misappropriation of more than a million dollars when he was managing director of the Liberia Petroleum Refining Corporation under the transitional government of Gyude Bryant. The investigation was postponed until the following week due to Snowe being ill.[7] Snowe appeared for questioning again on 6 March. It has been argued that Snowe is immune from prosecution because he is a legislator, but according to justice minister Frances Johnson Morris, immunity can be removed for certain crimes, including corruption.[8] Snowe appeared in court to face the charge against him on 12 April.[9] His lawyers filed a bond of $1.8 million U.S. dollars, but the prosecution argued this was inadequate and needed to be doubled, and also argued that the source of the bond, the African Insurance Company of Liberia, could not legally issue it to Snowe. On 16 August 2007, the Monrovia City Court ruled in Snowe's favor, declaring the bond to be "sufficient and valid".[10]

ECOWAS

In March 2020, Snowe was appointed to chair the ECOWAS Parliamentary Committee on Political Affairs, Peace, Security and African Peer Review Mechanism by the speaker of ECOWAS Parliament Sidie Mohammed Tunis of Sierra Leone.[11]

gollark: ¿????¿¿;
gollark: Has anyone ever actually *asked* most of the frequently asked questions?
gollark: I think politics is probably about as controversial as theology. Most people here are probably not the demographic to care much about theological conflict stuff.
gollark: We probably only need info, introductions/welcome (could be merged), computers, maths, politics/economics, general "things" (#3d-printing/<#694964719135490078>/<#677752722761711618>/<#677667174826901513>), media (music, creative works, video games, misc and links), images/things in the world (aviation/images/luxury hotels/surface transport/restaurants/pets).
gollark: I feel like this is an unproductively large number of channels.

References

  1. "Newly Elected Lawmakers". Daily Observer. 13 October 2017. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  2. "Newly Elected Lawmakers". Daily Observer. 13 October 2017. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  3. "Ex-Taylor ally sacked as speaker", BBC News, 18 January 2007.
  4. "Liberian speaker reinstated by judge", Reuters (IOL), 24 January 2007.
  5. Alphonso Toweh, "Parliamentary speaker defeats ouster bid", Independent Online (South Africa), 29 January 2007.
  6. "Constitutional wrangle over removal of Liberian speaker intensifies", African Press Agency, 30 January 2007.
  7. "Police investigate former Liberian parliamentary speaker", African Press Agency, 2 March 2007.
  8. "Former Liberian speaker re-appears before police investigators", African Press Agency, 7 March 2007.
  9. "Former Liberian parliament speaker appears in court for theft charges", African Press Agency, 12 April 2007.
  10. George Borteh, "Liberia: Snowe Relishes Court Ruling", The Analyst, Monrovia (allAfrica.com), 17 August 2007.
  11. "Liberia: Rep. Edwin Snowe Appointed to Head Top Committee at ECOWAS Parliament". FrontPageAfrica. 12 March 2020. Retrieved 6 April 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.