Monrovia- With the two accounts from the Hon. Kolubah family and the government of Liberia, who really saying the truth in the Incident that led to Hon. Kolubah family not tratravel at the RIA.
The wife of Hon. Kolubah told abloca radio station Saturday afternoon that she doesn’t know what she was denied from traveling because according to her, she interrogated about her children to know whether she was not trafficking the children and even called her husband Hon Yekek kolubah to come testify which he did.
But said she was surprised to have been told after she and her children belongings were placed on plane not to board the plane thus making her angry.
Also speaking Hon. Kolubah said his family didn’t traval because president Weah told immigration officers that his family shouldn’t leave the country. He said ” let leave my family out of this president Weah; is this the way how you want to go against your critics, I will not bide down to you president Weah. I’m consulting my lawyer to give me advice on which step next I will take.”

But in direct respond, the government clarify in a lengthy press release on Saturday evening stating that:
The government of Liberia wishes to clarify that it did not prohibit family members of Representative Yekeh Kolubah from leaving the country out of any political consideration or ongoing legal case he has with the courts. Instead, immigration officers acted purely in keeping with anti-human trafficking regulations.
Madam Georgetta Joyce Kolubah – believed to be the wife of the Representative – was due to leave the country on Saturday, July 13, accompanied by seven children, five of whom had diplomatic passports. The other two had laissez-passers. During routined checks, Madam Kolubah could not prove that all the children were hers, or that they were traveling with the consent of both parents in keeping with anti-human trafficking procedures.
When she didn’t produce the necessary legal instrument which would have validated her claims, Mrs. Kolubah was duly informed on how such documentation could be obtained, without which she cannot leave the country with the children. This is standard practice which other adults accompanied by even a single child have had to face.
Meanwhile, the government strongly refutes Representative Kolubah’s claims that he spoke to Justice Minister Musa Dean about Saturday’s incident. The Minister has not spoken with the lawmaker since his return to the country from a trip to Guinea.
The Government, however, reiterates its commitment to upholding the rights of every Liberian, including the right to free movement. The government interposes no objection to any plans by Representative Kolubah’s family to travel out of Liberia, except where interdicted by the courts.
The big question is who actually saying the truth with the other different accounts in the public