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Foreign Minister Tops WomenVoices 2025 Performance Scorecard

Foreign Minister Sara Beysolow Nyanti has emerged as the highest-rated female official in the WomenVoices Newspaper 2025 Performance Scorecard, earning an “A” grade and standing alone as the only woman in government to achieve that distinction.

The year-end assessment reviewed the performance of women appointed by President Joseph Nyuma Boakai across governance, service delivery, leadership effectiveness, and crisis management. While the scorecard revealed mixed results among many female officials, it identified Beysolow Nyanti’s leadership at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as exceptional, citing historic achievements with measurable national and global impact.

Central to her top rating was Liberia’s successful election as a Non-Permanent Member of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) for the 2026–2027 term. The victory marked Liberia’s return to one of the world’s most influential decision-making bodies after years of limited diplomatic presence. WomenVoices described the achievement as the product of sustained lobbying, coalition-building, and disciplined diplomacy—an outcome that restored Liberia’s relevance in global peace and security discussions.

“This was not symbolic diplomacy,” the paper noted. “It was strategic, results-driven engagement that placed Liberia back on the global stage.”

Beyond multilateral success, the Foreign Minister recorded notable bilateral and regional gains. In December 2025, she finalized a US$124 million Memorandum of Understanding with the United States Department of State—the first agreement of its kind in West Africa—signaling renewed confidence in Liberia as a strategic partner. She also signed a Host Country Agreement with ECOWAS, securing Liberia as the home of the ECOWAS Youth Development Center. The agreement positions Monrovia as a regional hub for youth policy, innovation, and development.

“These outcomes demonstrate a ministry that understands how to translate diplomacy into national advantage,” WomenVoices observed.

Citizen-Focused Diplomacy

The scorecard further credited the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for reforms that delivered direct benefits to Liberians. Among them was the extension of U.S. visa validity for Liberian travelers, with B-1, B-2, and B1/B2 visas increased from 12 to 36 months—reducing costs and bureaucratic hurdles for thousands of citizens.

Additional reforms included the recall and reissuance of diplomatic passports to curb abuse, alongside a comprehensive review of the Foreign Service Manual to align it with modern diplomatic standards. According to WomenVoices, these measures addressed long-standing governance weaknesses and reflected strong political will to reform internal systems.

The report also highlighted Beysolow Nyanti’s emphasis on economic diplomacy, including work toward a visa-on-arrival regime to boost tourism and trade, and sustained engagement in international forums that improved Liberia’s global image after years of stagnation.

While acknowledging controversies—such as concerns over a US$125 million health-sector agreement with the United States and debate surrounding a deportation arrangement involving a Salvadoran national—WomenVoices concluded that these issues did not overshadow the ministry’s overall performance.

“An ‘A’ grade does not mean perfection,” the paper emphasized. “It reflects dominant performance against mandate, national interest, and measurable outcomes.”

In the broader context, the Foreign Minister’s distinction stood out sharply. Although women’s representation in government rose from 31.6% to 39% under President Boakai, several social-sector ministries struggled with persistent challenges in health, education, and gender protection.

Against this backdrop, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs was singled out as a portfolio where authority translated into results, reforms were implemented, and Liberia’s international standing was clearly elevated.

As WomenVoices concluded, “In a year of mixed performance by women leaders, Sara Beysolow Nyanti showed what decisive, strategic, and disciplined leadership looks like.”

For Liberia, 2025 marked a return to the global diplomatic stage—and for WomenVoices, it was the year the Foreign Minister earned top honors.

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