Liberia Truth and Reconciliation Commission Highlights Firestone’s Abuses
When Liberia finally emerged from years of civil war, a Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) was established to “promote national peace, security, unity and reconciliation” and to investigate human rights violations that occurred. On July 1, 2009, the TRC released its final report which is available online here. Throughout the report, the TRC mentions the role that Firestone has played historically in abusing human rights in Liberia and ultimately concludes that Firestone aided and abetted economic crimes.
The TRC report mentions the role that forced labor allegedly played in setting up Firestone’s rubber plantation when the company first came to Liberia in the 1920’s. As the report states,
The report goes on to assert that elites in Liberia and the US government worked together to help Firestone secure an agreement with the Liberian government that allowed the company cheap access to the country’s resources and also placed Firestone in a position of significant economic and political influence over Liberia:
The power held by Firestone and the company’s close relationship with the US government was exhibited during the civil war in Liberia according to the report. The TRC report highlights how Firestone was able to avoid sanctions on rubber that were applied to many other Liberian resources due to the role these exports played in fueling the conflict. The report says that Firestone won this debate by utilizing its close relationship with the US Government and by making significant financial contributions to Charles Taylor in exchange for protection on the plantation:
The report notes at least one instance of these security forces being used to attack Firestone workers:
[In September 1997], Liberian police and ECOMOG soldiers assaulted a group of some 500 employees of the Firestone Plantations Company in Harbel, near Monrovia, who were demonstrating peacefully for the release of four colleagues held by the company’s security staff. Police and soldiers reportedly beat the workers with batons and gun butts, and then opened fire, injuring seven people. (Page 188)
To read the full report which includes additional references to Firestone, please click here.









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