Etweda Ambavi Gbenyon Cooper, known as Sugars, is a Liberian politician and peace activist. She has been described as "the doyenne" and "the godmother" of the Liberian women's movement.[1][2][3]
Etweda Cooper was born in Edina, into an elite family descended from freed slaves who left the United States for Liberia in the 1800s. She grew up speaking Bassa and Liberian English.[2][4]
Cooper is known across the country by her nickname, Sugars.[5][6]
She left Liberia as a young woman to attend university in Bern, Switzerland.[4]
Activism
First Liberian Civil War
After returning to Liberia, Cooper became involved in the peace movement in 1994.[4]
In 1998, Cooper was briefly arrested by the Liberia National Police after denouncing the murder of a woman at the hands of security forces.[10][13][14]
After the second civil war ended, she helped organize women in favor of Ellen Johnson Sirleaf's 2005 presidential campaign, in which Sirleaf was elected the first female president of an African country.[5]
Cooper appears in the documentary Pray the Devil Back to Hell about women's role in the Liberian peace process.[17][18] In 2006, she became the first-ever recipient of the 1325 Award from the Dutch government.[19][20]
Political career
In April 2010, Cooper was elected mayor of her hometown, Edina, which she aimed to turn into an eco-friendly, safe town that attracts tourists.[1][4][7]
In 2012, she was appointed superintendent of Grand Bassa County by President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, and confirmed by the Liberian Senate. On her appointment, she became mayor emeritus of Edina.[21][22]
Her time in office included overseeing the county's response to the Western African Ebola virus epidemic.[23] Later in her term, Cooper became chairperson of Liberia's Superintendent Council.[24] She resigned as the county's superintendent in 2015, citing a "personal reason."[25][26]
^Press, Robert M. (March 2011). "Principle and Ambition: Human Rights Activism in Liberia and Policy Implications for Taming Authoritarian Regimes". Journal of Human Rights Practice. 3 (1): 113–127 – via Oxford Academic Journals.