NATIONAL NEWS
MONROVIA – As the Liberian Senate prepares to conduct the confirmation hearing for Atty. Cornelia Wonkerleh Kruah as Minister for Youth and Sports, concerns are brewing about her ability to lead the future of youth development in Liberia. Some say her record of service reflects competence, integrity, and a clear vision for institutional transformation. Others contend she lacks the maturity of being a youth-in-chief for President Joseph Nyuma Boakai’s cabinet.
Since January 2024, Ms. Kruah has served as Deputy Minister for Administration at the Ministry of State for Presidential Affairs.
By: Staff Writer
In this role, she has worked assiduously to distinguish herself as a results-driven administrator, leading far-reaching reforms that strengthened governance systems, improved accountability, and modernized internal operations in line with national oversight recommendations.
Widely regarded as one of the youngest prospective Ministers of Youth and Sports in recent decades, Ms. Kruah represents a generational bridge between policy leadership and the lived realities of Liberia’s youthful population.
Many young people argue that her nomination signals a deliberate commitment to entrusting youth development to leadership that understands both the aspirations of young people and the discipline required to manage public institutions effectively that will lead to the creation of opportunities.
During her tenure at the Ministry of State for Presidential Affairs, Ms. Kruah led significant organizational development initiatives, including the establishment of a dedicated Monitoring and Evaluation Department in keeping with recommendations General Auditing Commission. Her handling of the controversy of supplementary workers’ payroll was later regarded by many as efficient and strategic in administrative prowess.
As part of her reform efforts at the Ministry of State, she created and operationalized new Administration and Communication units, each led by qualified directors, and oversaw structural consolidation through the formation of the Archives, Deeds, and Registration Department.
These reforms laid a stronger institutional foundation for service delivery and record management.
Her leadership in policy formulation further underscores her preparedness for ministerial responsibility.
Ms. Kruah spearheaded the drafting and internal adoption of comprehensive Human Resource, Financial Management, Procurement, Budget and Planning, Fleet Management, Monitoring and Evaluation, and Scholarship policies.
Kruah also helped develop solution response to audit findings and help enhance policies that have enhanced compliance, clarity, and operational efficiency at the Ministry of State.
Atty. Kruah also demonstrated firm commitment to human resource reform, coordinating staff headcounts and credential audits in collaboration with the Civil Service Agency, regularizing payroll records, and finalizing a proposed ministerial organogram.
Her work extended to procurement and financial reforms, including reactivating the Procurement Committee in compliance with Public Procurement and Concessions Commission laws, instituting structured budget monitoring systems, and revitalizing key departments with credentialed personnel.
Perhaps most notably, her stewardship of audit and accountability processes resulted in measurable gains. Through the establishment of an Audit Follow-Up Committee and close coordination with oversight bodies, the Ministry’s audit follow-up score improved dramatically from 7.56 percent to 81 percent, alongside the successful assignment of a focal person from the Internal Audit Agency.
These recent professional contributions to Liberia’s policy reform amid her appearance before the Senate, her record speaks clearly to her readiness to lead. Her connection with the growing Liberian entertainment, sports, and digital media sector is attracting more even attention amongst the youth. Many observers say she can inject new life into the government’s policy for youth development.
The Ministry of Youth and Sports stands at a critical juncture, requiring disciplined administration, policy coherence, and innovative leadership to unlock opportunities for Liberia’s young people. Atty. Kruah brings these qualities in abundance.
Her supporters say her confirmation would mark not only a personal milestone but a strategic investment in competent, accountable, and youth-centered governance.
With the visible scarcity of opportunity for young people in a consistently demanding economy, will Atty. Cornelia Kruah demonstrates that she is exceptionally well-suited to lead the transformation that many young Liberians crave?

