Scholars have noted that the April 1980 coup occurred amid long-standing structural tensions in Liberia’s political and economic system. Reforms introduced during the presidency of William V. S. Tubman expanded political participation and economic integration but preserved Americo-Liberian dominance through patronage and one-party rule. Under President William R. Tolbert Jr., economic pressures, popular unrest—including the 1979 Rice Riots—and the emergence of organized opposition groups further weakened the legitimacy of the ruling elite, creating conditions that facilitated military intervention. On 12 April 1980, commanding a group of Krahn soldiers, Master Sergeant Samuel Doe
led a military coup by attacking the
Liberian Executive Mansion and killing President
William Tolbert. His forces killed another 26 of Tolbert's supporters in the fighting. Thirteen members of the Cabinet were publicly executed ten days later. Shortly after the coup, government ministers were walked publicly around Monrovia in the nude and then summarily executed by a firing squad on the beach. The convicted were denied the right to a lawyer or any appeal. Hundreds of government workers fled the country, while others were imprisoned. After the coup, Doe assumed the rank of general and established a People's Redemption Council (PRC), composed of himself and 14 other low-ranking officers, to rule the country. The early days of the regime were marked by mass executions of members of Tolbert's deposed government. Doe ordered the release of about 50 leaders of the opposition
Progressive People's Party, who had been jailed by Tolbert during the rice riots of the previous month. presenting credentials to Doe, 1981 Shortly after that, Doe ordered the arrest of 91 officials of the Tolbert regime. Within days, eleven former members of Tolbert's cabinet, including his brother
Frank, were brought to trial to answer charges of "high
treason, rampant
corruption and gross violation of
human rights." Doe suspended the Constitution, allowing these trials to be conducted by a Commission appointed by the state's new military leadership, with defendants being refused both
legal representation and
trial by jury, virtually ensuring their conviction. Doe abruptly ended 133 years of Americo-Liberian political domination. Some hailed the coup as the first time since Liberia's establishment as a country that it was governed by people of native African descent instead of by the Americo-Liberian elite. Other persons without Americo-Liberian heritage had held the Vice Presidency (
Henry Too Wesley), as well as Ministerial and Legislative positions in years prior. Many people welcomed Doe's takeover as a shift favoring the majority of the population that had largely been excluded from government participation since the country's establishment. However, the new government, led by the leaders of the coup d'état and calling itself the
People's Redemption Council (PRC), lacked governing experience and a coherent ideological program. The PRC was composed largely of noncommissioned officers with limited administrative background and initially relied on civilian technocrats and opposition figures to manage state affairs. Doe became head of state and suspended the constitution, while promising a return to civilian rule by 1985. In the first alleged plot against his government, nine military personnel arrested two months after the original 1980 coup were reportedly jailed for life. In June 1981, his government denounced another alleged coup in which thirteen members were executed behind closed doors. Months later,
Thomas Weh Syen, an outspoken critic of some of Doe's policies, including the closure months before of the
Libyan diplomatic mission and the forced reduction of staff from fifteen to six at the Soviet embassy, was beaten and arrested on 12 August of that same year, along with four other officers. They were promised a defense attorney, but none was given, and in three days, they were executed, which caused panic among the citizens of the capital.
Conjectures on the genesis of the coup In August 2008, before a
Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) in Monrovia, Doe's former justice minister, Councillor
Chea Cheapoo — who contested the 2011 Liberia Presidential elections — alleged the American
CIA had provided a map of the Executive Mansion, enabling the rebels to break into it; that it was a white American CIA agent who shot and killed Tolbert; and that the Americans "were responsible for Liberia's nightmare". However, the next day, before the same TRC, another former minister of Samuel Doe, Dr. Boima Fahnbulleh, testified that "the Americans did not support the coup led by Mr. Doe". Some facts of the 1980 coup are still clouded by reports of an "Unknown Soldier". It is reported that an "unknown soldier" was one of the "white" mercenaries who would have staged the 1980 military takeover of the state. According to the autobiography of Tolbert's wife
Victoria, the First Lady witnessed a masked man with a "white" hand stabbing her late husband. == Presidency ==