Tom Kamara (1949-2012) was born in Lofa County, Liberia. He towered among the few famous journalists in Liberia. Though his critics viewed him as a controversial journalist, both his detractors and admirers undoubtedly respected his refusal to bend the truth and compromise his objectivity.
After his studies in the United States, Tom immediately returned home in 1981 to become Editor-In-Chief of the government-owned The New Liberian newspaper.
In 1983 Tom became Director of Press and Public Affairs of the Constitutional Drafting Commission. For reasons that were never revealed, he was thrown into jail by the National Security Agency from where he clandestinely escaped and fled into exile to the Netherlands. Returning home in 1990, he established in 1993 the New Democrat newspaper as an alternative medium for free press in Liberia. When Charles Taylor seized power in 1996, he had to flee into exile again in the Netherlands.
Returning to Liberia in 2004, Tom Kamara reached the pinnacle of his career as Publisher and Managing Editor of the New Democrat newspaper.
He died on June 8, 2012 in Brussels, on his way to the Netherlands for medical treatment following a brief illness.
Leo Platvoet studied sociology in Amsterdam and was active in Dutch politics for 35 years as a party leader, local councilor, Senator and as a member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. Between 1986 and 2002 he wrote sixteen volumes in the Dutch Odyssee Travel Guidebook series about European destinations.
In the 2010s, he worked for five years in Liberia, for the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs.