The Quiet Crisis: Liberia’s Digital Sovereignty Under Threat
The traditional understanding of national security, once defined by physical borders and visible checkpoints, is now dangerously outmoded. In the 21st century, the most critical assets of a nation – its citizens’ identities, health records, land ownership details, financial transactions, and even patterns of movement – no longer reside in secure physical vaults. Instead, they exist as data, flowing through intricate digital systems, increasingly managed by entities beyond Liberia’s direct control. This shift has ushered in a quiet crisis, one that threatens the very fabric of the nation’s sovereignty.
At a time when Liberian innovators like Hellen S. Momoh are articulating a vision for digital self-reliance – famously stating, “if data is the new oil, Liberia must have its own refinery” – the country appears to be moving in the opposite direction. Rather than developing its own digital infrastructure and expertise, Liberia is exporting its most sensitive data, often without a comprehensive understanding of the long-term implications.
This is not a theoretical concern. Recent years have seen the Liberian government enter into agreements that place highly sensitive national datasets, including biometric identification systems, health records, and immigration platforms, into the hands of foreign technology firms. These arrangements, sometimes spanning multi-decade concessions and other times framed as bilateral assistance, are more than just technical implementations. They represent the digital skeleton of the state.
The entity that controls these systems does not merely process information; it gains the power to shape access, influence decision-making timelines, and, in the most concerning scenarios, wield significant leverage. This situation transcends mere technological dependence; it strikes at the heart of national sovereignty.
For years, Liberia grappled with the digitization of basic public services. Processes such as business registration, passport issuance, and licensing remained largely manual. This inertia was not due to a lack of technological solutions but often stemmed from a reluctance to embrace transparency. Digital systems inherently reduce discretion, close loopholes, and make illicit activities more difficult to conceal. In many instances, resistance to technological adoption was, in fact, resistance to accountability.
Now, as digitization becomes an undeniable necessity, the pendulum has swung, but perhaps in an unintended direction. Instead of prioritizing the development of local capacity and trusting Liberian expertise, a consistent pattern has emerged: systems are outsourced, solutions are imported, and the very individuals who should be constructing the nation’s digital backbone are excluded.
Liberian technology firms have voiced this concern directly. In a significant open letter to National Security Advisor Kofi Woods in August 2025, a consortium of local companies highlighted their systematic exclusion from major national Information and Communication Technology (ICT) projects. They contend that procurement criteria are often designed to be so restrictive that no Liberian-owned company can realistically qualify, leading to the inevitable outcome of strategic national systems being handed over to foreign entities while local capacity languishes.
The range of outsourced platforms is particularly telling. These include systems for:
- Work Permits
- eVisa applications
- Passport processing
- Alien Registration
- The Liberia Traffic Management System
- Even the PPCC eProcurement platform
These are not peripheral tools; they are core instruments of governance, fundamental to the functioning of the state. The irony is stark: while Liberia champions policies like “Buy Liberia” and “Build Liberia,” it appears to sideline its own citizens and businesses when it matters most.
This contradiction is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore. On one hand, Liberia is producing brilliant minds like Hellen Momoh, individuals who recognize that data is not merely a byproduct of governance but its very foundation. Through her work with Surna Technologies, Momoh envisions a future where African nations design, own, and control their own data infrastructure, enabling real-time decision-making based on systems tailored to local realities.
On the other hand, Liberia itself seems content to operate as a tenant within its own digital landscape, essentially renting the “brains” of other nations to manage its most critical data. This approach applauds the innovator working abroad while simultaneously undermining the very ecosystem she would need to return and build a robust digital future at home.
The pertinent question then arises: is Liberia nurturing excellence only to see it exported? Is Liberian ingenuity being celebrated while its practitioners are systematically denied a seat at the decision-making table?
National security in the modern era extends far beyond physical borders like Bo Waterside, Ganta, or Loguatuo. It now encompasses data centers, cloud architectures, and complex algorithmic systems. The threats, though often invisible, are undeniably real. Data breaches, critical dependencies on external systems, and foreign control over essential infrastructure represent the new fault lines of state vulnerability.
Liberia cannot afford to navigate this new frontier with complacency. What is urgently required is not incremental reform but a fundamental reorientation of national strategy. Technology must transition from the periphery of policy-making to its very center. The nation needs a clear digital sovereignty framework that meticulously defines how national data is collected, stored, processed, and safeguarded. Procurement policies must be re-evaluated to not only invite foreign expertise but to actively cultivate and prioritize Liberian participation. Furthermore, the establishment of a dedicated national institution focused on digital infrastructure and data security may well be a necessary step.
Most critically, this endeavor demands leadership that understands that in the 21st century, sovereignty is as much a digital construct as it is a territorial one.
The current Boakai Administration has articulated its development agenda under the banner of ARREST. However, as Liberia ventures deeper into a world intrinsically defined by data, this framework feels incomplete. It is time to upgrade the acronym to RESTART, incorporating a new “T” for Technology.
To enter the second quarter of the 21st century without technology as a central pillar of national development is not merely an oversight. It sends a clear signal – to Liberians, to potential investors, and to the global community – that the nation is not yet fully prepared to compete, to protect its interests, or to lead in the digital age that has already arrived.
Hellen Momoh is illuminating the path forward, showcasing what is achievable. The ultimate question now is whether Liberia is prepared to embrace this vision and meet her at the forefront of this digital revolution.








