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Second Liberian Civil War

The Second Liberian Civil War was a civil war in the West African nation of Liberia that lasted from 1999 to 2003.

For other uses, see Liberian Civil War.

President Charles Taylor came to power in 1997 after victory in the First Liberian Civil War which led to two years of peace. The Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (LURD), an anti-Taylor rebel group backed by the government of Guinea, invaded northern Liberia in April 1999. LURD made gradual gains against Taylor in the north and began approaching the capital Monrovia by early 2002. The Movement for Democracy in Liberia (MODEL), a second anti-Taylor rebel group, invaded southern Liberia in early 2003 and quickly conquered most of the south. Taylor, reduced to controlling only a third of Liberia and under pressure from the Siege of Monrovia, resigned in August 2003 and fled to Nigeria. The Accra Comprehensive Peace Agreement was signed by the warring parties a week later, marking the political end of the conflict and beginning Liberia's transition to democracy. The National Transitional Government led by interim President Gyude Bryant governed the country until the 2005 general election.


The Second Liberian Civil War resulted in the deaths of over 50,000 people and the internal displacement of thousands more. The conflict saw the widespread use of child soldiers by both Taylor and LURD. The United Nations Mission in Liberia was deployed in the country until it was officially withdrawn in 2018.

(documentary film about Médecins Sans Frontières's work in Liberia after the war)

Living in Emergency: Stories of Doctors Without Borders

General:

International Crisis Group, ‘Liberia: The Key to Ending Regional Instability,’ 24 April 2002

Gerdes, Felix: , Frankfurt/New York: Campus Verlag & University of Chicago Press, 2013

Civil War and State Formation: The Political Economy of War and Peace in Liberia

Käihkö, Ilmari. "Bush Generals and Small Boy Battalions: Military Cohesion in Liberia and Beyond." (PhD thesis, Uppsala, 2016).

Insight on Conflict.Liberia

United Nations Mission in Liberia website

U.S. Institute of Peace

Text of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement

by Chris Hondros

Photo gallery