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Ellen Eugenia Johnson was born in Monrovia, capital city of Liberia. Founded in the 19th century by freed slaves from the United States, Liberia is the oldest republic in Africa. Its society has long been marked by tension between the indigenous people and the descendants of the American settlers. Three of Ellen Johnson's grandparents were of native Liberian descent; her paternal grandfather was a traditional chief of the Gola people. Her maternal grandfather was a German merchant who left the country during the First World War. Ellen Johnson's mother was a teacher, her father an attorney, and the first indigenous Liberian to serve in the country's legislature, a body long dominated by the descendants of the American settlers. Her parents placed a high value on education, and young Ellen received her secondary education at the prestigious College of West Africa in Monrovia, the nation's capital. University seemed a logical next step, but at 17, Ellen married James Sirleaf, a young agronomist with a degree from the University of Wisconsin.
The pressure of two careers placed a strain on the Sirleafs' marriage. When her husband became violent and abusive, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf filed for divorce. After the dissolution of her marriage, she continued her education in the United States, earning an economics degree from the University of Colorado. In 1971, she completed a Master's in Public Administration at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government. The following year, Sirleaf became Assistant Finance Minister in the administration of Liberian President William Tolbert. Her public criticism of administration policy, on occasions such as a commencement address at the College of West Africa, attracted national attention and created friction between Sirleaf and her superiors. In the mid-1970s Sirleaf left the Ministry to work for the World Bank in Washington, D.C., but she returned to Liberia in 1977 to serve as Deputy Finance Minister.
On April 12, 1980, a cadre of non-commissioned officers, led by Master Sergeant Samuel Doe, staged a coup d'état. President Tolbert and 26 of his followers were killed on the day of the coup. Ten days later, 13 members of Tolbert's cabinet were executed in public. Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and three other ministers were spared, but life in Liberia would soon become dangerous for anyone who opposed Doe and his allies. Sirleaf served briefly as President of the Liberian Bank for Development and Investment (LBDI), but her situation soon became impossible and she fled the country. For a brief time, she again worked as Senior Loan Officer for the World Bank in the United States, but was soon back in Africa, as Vice President of Citicorp's Africa Office in Nairobi, Kenya. Seeking international legitimacy for his regime, Samuel Doe scheduled elections in 1985. Sirleaf returned to Liberia to run for the vice presidency, but was soon arrested for criticizing Doe's corrupt regime. She was sentenced to ten years in prison, but international pressure forced Doe to pardon her shortly into her sentence. Although her name was removed from the vice presidential ballot, Sirleaf was permitted to run for the Senate. The subsequent election was widely viewed as fraudulent, and although Sirleaf won a seat in the Senate she refused to accept it. In November of 1985 she was arrested again and held until July of the following year, after which she left the country in secret and took a job as a Vice President of HSBC Equator Bank in Washington.
In 1992, Sirleaf joined the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). The first woman to run the UN's development program for Africa, she served for five years as Assistant Administrator and Director of the UNDP Regional Bureau of Africa, holding the title of Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations. By 1996 a coalition of neighboring African countries had forced the warring Liberian factions to agree to a ceasefire, and national elections were scheduled for the following year. Ellen Johnson Sirleaf returned to Liberia to run for President, but in an atmosphere still haunted by the violence of the preceding decade, she was decisively defeated by Charles Taylor. The regime of President Taylor proved to be a corrupt and repressive one, and Sirleaf became its most outspoken critic and her country's most visible advocate for reform. When President Taylor threatened to have her killed for her opposition to his administration, she moved to the neighboring country of Côte d'Ivoire, where she established a venture capital firm, the Kormah Development and Investment Corporation, as well as Measuagoon, a community development NGO for Liberia.
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf returned to Liberia in 2003 to chair the Governance Reform Commission of the Transitional Government. In this capacity she successfully transferred the reporting mechanism of the General Auditing Commission from the control of executive branch to the legislature, enabling more democratic oversight of the nation's finances. In 2005, Sirleaf resigned from the Commission to accept the nomination of the Unity Party as its candidate for President of Liberia in the country's first truly free election. Sirleaf placed second in the first round of voting, but won the runoff decisively, with 59 percent of the vote. On January 16, 2006, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was sworn in as the 24th President of Liberia. She is the first elected female head of state in African history. Sirleaf spent the next five years repairing the damage done by 25 years of violence and misrule. From its peak of prosperity, prior to the 1980 coup, Liberia had become one of the world's poorest nations, beset by illiteracy, hunger and pandemic unemployment. In her first years in office, Sirleaf negotiated the lifting of international trade sanctions against Liberia, and complete forgiveness of the country's crushing external debt.
In 2010, Newsweek magazine listed Johnson Sirleaf as one of the "Ten Best Leaders in the World," while The Economist called her "the best President the country has ever had." A grandmother of eight, President Sirleaf has become a popular symbol of democracy and women's rights, not only in her own country, but throughout Africa and the developing world. In 2011, she was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace, along with women's rights campaigners Leymah Gbowee of Liberia and Tawakkul Karman of Yemen. The Nobel Committee credited Sirleaf's contribution to "securing peace in Liberia, to promoting economic and social development, and to strengthening the position of women." Four days after the announcement of the Nobel Prize, President Sirleaf was elected to a second term in office.
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