Women Legislative Caucus of Liberia | Contracts, Monopolies, Public Procurement & Concession | Gender, Child Protection & Social Welfare | Youth & Sports | Foreign Affairs | Oil & Gas, Banking & Currency | Rules Order & Administration | Secretary General Montserrado County Legislative Caucus | Financial Secretary Women Legislative Caucus of Liberia/Congress For Democratic Change/Legislative Caucus | St. Philomena Lady Auxiliary #306 Knights of St John International
Nickname
The King Maker
Munah Evangeline Pelham-Youngblood (22 September 1983 – 8 July 2020) was a Liberian politician. She was elected twice to the Liberian House of Representatives. She was the youngest person ever elected to the Liberian parliament.[1] A partisan of the Congress for Democratic Change, she belonged to the inner circle of President George Weah.[2]
Early life and family
Munah Evangeline Pelham was born on 22 September 1983.[3] Her parents were Col. Walter Maxwell Pelham Sr., a senior Liberian National Police officer and head coach of the Liberia national football team, and Elizabeth Pelham, Comptroller of the House of Representatives.[4] She was married to international gold miner Dr. Raymond Youngblood, Jr. in 2013.[5][6][7] Hon. Pelham-Youngblood and her husband have one daughter Sarafina Munah Youngblood. Munah Pelham-Youngblood earned a B.Sc. degree in mass communications and a master's degree in international relations from the University of Liberia.[6][8]
Before being introduced into politics by her husband Pelham-Youngblood worked as a fashion and runway model.[7] She was a beauty queen, and represented Liberia in Miss Malaika International 2004 and Miss Silverbird International in 2005.[9][10] She was the first runner-up in the Miss Liberia contest of 2005.[11]
In the House of the Representatives, she chaired the committee on the Executive.[3] After the election of George Weah as President of Liberia, she organized the 2018 and 2019 State of the Nation addresses of President Weah.[2] She co-chaired the Women's Legislative Caucus (and later served as the financial secretary of the Women's Legislative Caucus) and the Committee on Contracts, Monopolies, Public Procurement & Concession, and was a member of the Committees on Gender, Child Protection & Social Welfare, Youth & Sports, Foreign Affairs, Oil & Gas, Banking & Currency, Rules Order & Administration.[3][13] She served as the secretary general of the Montserrado County Legislative Caucus.[13] She chaired the Liberian chapter of the World Bank/IMF Parliamentary Network.[3]
Illness and death
Pelham-Youngblood reportedly fell ill in mid-April 2018 and travelled out of Liberia for medical treatment, visiting Ghana and Ivory Coast before going to India.[14][6] While receiving treatment in India, rumours spread on Liberian social media of her death, provoking a rebuttal from her family.[14][6]
Pelham-Youngblood returned to Liberia on 18 July 2018.[6][4] A thanksgiving service was held at Lakpazee Community Church in Lakpazee, Sinkor, Monrovia to celebrate her return.[6] In 2019, she was out of Liberia for ten months for medical treatment.[4] She died in Accra, Ghana, on 8 July 2020, aged 36.[3]