Vice presidency Moniba served as interim vice president of Liberia from 1984 to 1985 and was later elected vice president following the
1985 Liberian general election. He took office on 6 January 1986 and served until September 1990 during the administration of President
Samuel Doe. Prior to assuming the vice presidency, Moniba had held several diplomatic and government positions, including service in the Liberian foreign service and academic roles in Liberia and abroad. During the attempted coup of November 1985, Moniba was captured by dissident soldiers and taken to a radio station where he was ordered at gunpoint to announce the resignation of the government. He refused and instead appealed to Liberians to refrain from violence and to resolve political disputes peacefully. In her memoir
This Child Will Be Great, former president of Liberia
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf describes the
general election of 1985 as rigged, claiming that the results were 'utterly, utterly false'. Sirleaf ran for senator in the election, winning a seat, but along with others protesting the widespread election fraud, refused to take it. During the early stages of the
First Liberian Civil War, Moniba also called for a peaceful resolution to Liberia's political crisis. After the end of the civil war, Moniba ran as a candidate in the
1997 presidential election, finishing behind
Charles Taylor and other candidates.
As ambassador Moniba served in the posts of
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Liberia to the
Court of St. James and the
Sovereign Military Order of Malta. Moniba also held the posts of Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs, Director of Research at the Ministry of Education in Monrovia, Liberia and First Secretary and Consul to the
Embassy of Liberia in Washington, D.C., US, and Ottawa, Canada. ==Awards==