Jeremiah Sulunteh

Jeremiah Congbeh Sulunteh (born October 11, 1958, in Gboimu Town, Suacoco, Bong County, Liberia) is the Vice Standard Bearer of Liberia's Alternative National Congress (ANC) political party, and its Vice Presidential candidate for the 2017 Liberia Presidential Elections. Sulunte's career in the areas of administration, teaching, and politics spans more than 30 years.[1] For more than 3 decades he has been a politician, administrator and academician. Sulunteh served as the Minister of Transport from 2006 to 2008 in Liberia under Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, and late as a Minister of Post and Telecommunications from 2008 to 2010, and as Minister of Labor from 2010 to 2012 before his appointment to Ambassador of Liberia in the United States of America in March 2012.[2]

Jeremiah Sulunteh
Vice Standard Bearer of the Alternative National Congress Liberia
Assumed office
2017
Personal details
Born (1958-10-11) 11 October 1958
Gboimu Town, Suacoco, Bong County, Liberia
NationalityLiberian
Political partyANC
Spouse(s)Kabeh Sulunteh
Children3
Alma materCuttington University (BS)
York University (MS)
Booker Washington Institute (Diploma)
American University in Cairo (MPA)
OccupationProfessor
ProfessionEconomist
Websitejeremiahsulunteh.com

Early life and education

Jeremiah Sulunteh was born on October 11, 1958, in Gboimu Town, Suacoco, Bong County, Liberia, to Sulunteh Yeibah, a farmer, and his wife, Kanny Bu-Nquoi, now deceased. After completing his secondary education in Suacoco Town, Sulunteh entered the Booker Washington Institute, a vocational school in Kakata, Liberia, where he earned a diploma in Agriculture in 1980. He later earned a B.S. in Economics at Cuttington University in Suacoco in 1988, an M.P.A. at the American University in Cairo, Egypt, in 1994, where his thesis was entitled "The Political Economy of African Development: A Comparative Study of Kenya and Tanzania," and an M.A. in Economics at York University in Toronto, Canada, in 2001, where he taught economics classes and wrote a thesis titled, "Public Sector Deficits and Macroeconomic Performance: Adjustment, Reform and Growth, the Case of Ghana."

Public service career

Sulunteh has worked as a financial aid advisor at York University, as an accounts representative at the Royal Bank of Canada, as project coordinator for the Friends of Liberia, as an administrative assistant to the Vice President for Administration at Cuttington University, and as a field financial analyst for a Bong County, Liberia, Agricultural Development Project. He has taught Public Finance Administration and Administrative Theory and Practice at the University of Liberia, as well as Economic Development at the Graduate School of Cuttington University, where he served as associate vice president for Planning and Development and then as administrator until 2006.

Political career

He is currently the Vice Standard Bearer of Liberia's Alternative National Congress (ANC) political party, and its Vice Presidential candidate for the 2017 Liberia Presidential Elections. [3]

In 2005, Sulunteh ran for Liberia's vice-presidency on a ticket with Winston Tubman, but the pair did not survive the first round of balloting, and went on to support the eventual winner, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

Personal life

Sulunteh is married to Kabeh Sulunteh and together they have three children. He speaks and writes Kpelle, his native tongue, which is Liberia's most commonly spoken indigenous language, as well as English, which is the dominant language of government and commerce.

gollark: > just rewrite potatOS actuallyno.
gollark: It implements virtual files in a very hacky and not good way, and that is causing problems with my new feature.
gollark: I ran into some issues and now I'm seriously thinking about rewriting the potatOS sandboxing stuff.
gollark: I guess it doesn't matter much for my security model as it's only verifying signatures, but hmm.
gollark: Hmm, the existing ECC stuff which exists *isn't* constant-time? I suppose it does seem to have a decent amount of conditionals in it.

References

  1. "Biography: Jeremiah Sulunteh". Retrieved 30 July 2017.
  2. "Ambassador Sulunteh", WashDiplomat, 2 May 2012.
  3. "Sulunteh ‘Formally’ Crosses Over to ANC", Liberian Observer, 17 March 2017.
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