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  1. #1
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    US Lawmakers Introduce Bill to Stop Mass Deportation of TPS Liberians from the U.S.

    US Lawmakers Introduce Bill to Stop Mass Deportation of Liberians from the United States


    By Admin Last updated Feb 14, 2019




    Monrovia – Two Democratic Party lawmakers of Rhode Island have reintroduced the Liberian Refugee Immigration Fairness Act, which aims to allow eligible Liberians to apply for permanent residency and provide them with a pathway to citizenship.

    The bill by Senator Jack Reed and Congressman David Cicilline aims to prevent Liberians, whose temporary status in the US will soon expire, avoid deportation.


    Thousands of Liberians have been living in the United States since the outbreak of the civil war that claimed 250,000 lives. Some of them have also held temporary status due to the outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus in 2014.


    As part of its humanitarian response, the US government offered certain Liberians an opportunity to live, work, and pay taxes in the United States under the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) and Deferred Enforced Departure (DED) systems, extended by both Republican and Democrat administrations beginning 1991.


    However, in 2018 President Trump terminated the DED for Liberian beneficiaries, setting up a March 31, 2019 deadline.


    But in the bill, the lawmakers outlined the significance of extending the status of Liberians.



    “Many Liberians came to America to escape violence,
    instability, and disease and are now pillars of our communities. They are making important economic and civic contributions and should be allowed to stay,” said Senator Reed.


    “Some who were brought here as children have grown up and now have children of their own who are U.S. citizens. Instead of splitting up families and deporting them to a far off land where they no longer have a home, these folks should have the opportunity to stay, play by the rules, and get on a pathway to citizenship.”


    Reed, who introduced the Act in 1999 and has done so every session of Congress since that time, says the “clock is ticking”, suggesting that the bill will help provide “stability to families facing an uncertain future and possible deportation.”

    At the same time, Congressman Cicilline stressed that “Rhode Island is home to a “strong, vibrant Liberian community” that has turned the place their home when Liberia was facing “unspeakable violence”.


    “It is shameful that President Trump wants them to now choose between leaving the United States voluntarily or facing the threat of deportation,” said Congressman Cicilline.


    “This is a commonsense bill that will stop the administration from tearing apart even more immigrant families than they already have. It will give Liberians living in Rhode Island and across America an opportunity to apply for permanent residency and, eventually, a path to citizenship.”


    Without passage of this legislation or another extension, thousands of Liberians across the US could face the risk of deportation on March 31st.


    Original cosponsors of the Senate bill include Senators Ben Cardin (D-MD), Dick Durbin (D-IL), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Tina Smith (D-MN), Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI).


    Original cosponsors of the House bill include Jim Langevin (RI-02), Pramila Jayapal (WA-07), Jim McGovern (MA-02), Ilhan Omar (MN-05), Dean Phillips (MN-03), and Eleanor Holmes Norton (DC-AL).


    Rhode Island has one of the largest populations of Liberians per capita, and Senator Reed has been working since 1999 to give the community legal status.


    Many members of the Liberian community in the United States financially assist families and communities back home, make important contributions to Liberia’s reform and development.


    Liberia’s nascent recovery efforts could be reversed if these remittances end, harming the United States’ foreign policy interests in the region, according to some US media.


    “I will continue to advocate for the Administration to change course and extend legal status for Liberians. In the meantime, I call on Congress to end this uncertainty for Liberians by taking up and passing the Liberian Refugee Immigration Fairness Act,” Reed concluded.

    https://frontpageafricaonline.com/di...united-states/
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  2. #2
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Liberian Immigrants are Running Out of Time

    By Josefina de la Fuente on February 16, 2019

    A federal program that protects their status and allows them to work here is about to expire

    Members from the Liberian community gathered together on Sunday in the Christ Assembly Lutheran Church, Staten Island


    In less than two months, the life of Rose Knuckles Bull, a Liberian immigrant, will change forever.


    After more than 20 years of living in the United States, most of those years in Staten Island, the 68-year-old retiree will have to pack her belongings and leave the country before the end of March when her protected status as an immigrant ends.


    For now, Rose Knuckles Bull is covered by a federal program called the Deferred Enforced Departure, or DED for short, which provides her with a work permit and a shield from deportation.

    She last entered the United States in 1999, after escaping from a civil war in her homeland that killed around 250,000 people.


    In 2002, President George W. Bush granted immigrants from Liberia, like Bull, who lived here Temporary Protected Status, a special designation protecting immigrants who come from countries with civil unrest or ones that have experienced natural disasters. When the order ended in 2007, Bush extended the protection by granting Liberians DED; President Barack Obama extended the order.

    Liberia is the only country in the world protected by DED in the United States—and Bull is one of 1,000 to 3,600 people that are protected by DED, according to undated data from the Department of Homeland Security.


    Last March, however, President Donald Trump ordered that the program end within 12 months.

    “Liberia is no longer experiencing armed conflict and has made significant progress in restoring stability and democratic governance,” said President Trump, when he ended DED last year.


    Bull, along with other 5,000 to 8,000 Liberians who live in Staten Island, are skeptical —and worried. The only borough that voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 elections has one of the highest concentrations of citizens from this country outside Africa. Most of them reside in Park Hill neighborhood, referred as the “Little Liberia.”

    The looming deadline imposed by the president’s order has many in the community concerned about the future.


    “These people have never been more nervous in their life,” said Jennifer Gray-Brumskine, the chairman of the board of directors for the Staten Island Liberian Community Association. She came to the U.S from Liberia in 1985 and now is a U.S citizen. “Everyone is so scared.”


    Bull, for one, however, isn’t scared so much as resigned to follow President´s Trump orders and leave the United States. “We don’t have a right to be here, it’s a privilege,” she said matter-of-factly.


    She says she would like to return to Liberia before she’s deported in the hope that she’ll be able to retain her visitor’s visa in the process so she could come back to the United States to visit her grandchildren, who are U.S. citizens. But it won’t be easy. “How can I go back if I never worked to get any money to go home? Social Security doesn´t pay much. I would like to save money to go home,” she said in a brief interview on Sunday.


    But, with each day that passes, she is running out of time.


    Bull first came to the United States in 1972 to study. She has a degree in education and has worked steadily since she came back in 1999, mostly as an office worker in the Human Resources Administration of the city. She retired in 2013 and now, she makes ends meet with her monthly retirement checks.

    “The only income I have is Social Security,”
    said Bull, who is currently trying to find a place to live in Liberia.


    On January 28th, during a city council immigration committee session, Bitta Mostofi, the commissioner of the Mayor´s Office of Immigrant Affairs, said New York City government officials are worried about the impact that the end of DED might have in the city, but particularly in places like Staten Island.


    New York City, according to Mostofi, has been working to provide legal help and information to the affected population, while advocating for immigrants in the city at the federal level.


    “We are deeply concerned about federal policies that are looking to roll back programs that have protected communities for decades in our city,” Mostofi said. “Many of these individuals come from mixed status families, they have U.S citizen children, others have been here on average over a decade.”


    Meanwhile, in Staten Island, where thousands of Liberians live, members of the community are unsettled and trying to deal with what is coming.

    Life goes on though. On Sundays, men, children in suits and shiny polished shoes, and women wearing elegant hats and long, colorful dresses, gather together at the Christ Assembly Lutheran Church in Staten Island to participate in a 150-minute-long service. Some of them have DED, others are living undocumented with an expired Temporary Protected Status. All of them are worried about what will happen to them if they get deported.


    Minister Daniels understands the fear. “A lot of people are terrified, people are running to immigration,” said Levi Titus Daniels, minister of Christ Assembly Church in Staten Island. “These people have been living here for like 20-30 years; they have kids that are American citizens.”


    “The government needs to rethink this decision. I don’t want to use the term barbaric,” he continued. But “I think it is going to be really harmful to these people, and I fear for these kids.”


    In addition, he says, many of his parishioners wonder how they will make ends meet if they are forced to return to Liberia. “If you go back to Liberia right now,” he said, “the country doesn’t have space for the middle class.”


    Running against the clock, the Liberian’s community’s association’s Gray-Brumskine is not ready to give up yet and is fighting for a path to citizenship for Liberians who are here. The group is considering a lawsuit as other immigrants have done.


    After President Trump announced the end of Temporary Protected Status for six countries, including, Haiti, Nicaragua and El Salvador, in 2018, a lawsuit was filed by a group of TPS holders and their children, against that decision. District Judge Edward Chen from California halted the end of the program for around 300,000 people from those countries.


    “We want to file the lawsuit in California, just the way they filed,” Gray-Brumskine said, adding that the Liberian community needs to “buy time in court.”


    Gray-Brumskine’s organization, along with other advocacy groups, have also deployed an intense lobbying effort in Congress, including having conversations with Sen. Jack Reed (D-RI) and others.


    Last Tuesday, Reed, along with Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI) and other members of Congress, introduced the Liberian Refugee Immigration Fairness Act “to allow eligible Liberians to apply for permanent residency and provide them with a pathway to citizenship.”


    For Liberians, like Bull, the only hope is that the act works its way through Congress before President Trump’s March 31 deadline.

    http://nycitylens.com/2019/02/liberi...-running-time/
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  3. #3
    Moderator Beezer's Avatar
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    NO EXTENSIONS!

    SEND THESE PEOPOLE BACK HOME.

    THEY SHOULD HAVE SAVED AND KNEW THIS DAY WAS COMING.

    DO NOT GO OUT "KICKING AND SCREAMING"...SAY "THANK YOU" ON YOUR WAY OUT!

    NO MORE TPS
    NO MORE REFUGEES
    NO MORE EXTENSIONS
    NO PATH TO STAY
    NO ILLEGAL ALIENS
    NO DACA
    NO AMNESTY
    NO ASYLUM
    NO MORE WORK VISA'S
    NO MORE STUDENT VISA'S


    STOP THROWING THE AMERICAN PEOPLE UNDER THE BUS!

    TAKE CARE OF OUR HOMELESS, OUR SENIOR'S, OUR VETERAN'S!!!

    WE ARE SICK OF THIS UNRELENTING INVASION OF OUR COUNTRY AND THESE UNGRATEFUL PEOPLE WHO ARE DUMPED ON OUR BACKS TO PAY FOR!


    THINK OF THE RELIEF TO STANTEN ISLAND TO GET 8,000 OF THEM OUT OF THEIR CITY!

    LET OUR HOMELESS AMERICAN'S TAKE THAT HOUSING AND JOBS!

    I FEAR FOR AMERICAN'S IF WE DO NOT START DEPORTING THESE PEOPLE BY THE THOUSANDS! I FEAR FOR OUR FUTURE! THEY CAN GO HOME AND BUILD AMERICA ON THEIR SOIL.

    SHUT ALL IMMIGRATION DOWN FOR 10 YEARS AND GIVE US A DAMN BREAK!!!
    Last edited by Beezer; 02-17-2019 at 09:52 AM.
    ILLEGAL ALIENS HAVE "BROKEN" OUR IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

    DO NOT REWARD THEM - DEPORT THEM ALL

  4. #4
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    NO AMNESTY

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