US: Renewed deportation fear grips US-TPS Liberians

By Own Correpondent, with support from New Democrat-Liberia – In Minneapolis, news of potential violence spilling over into Liberia has been chilling for Liberian immigrants whose extended TPS are about to expire. According to Mshale, an English-language Kenyan eekly, some 10,000 Liberian immigrants are under temporary protected status in the United States. An estimated 25,000 Liberians live in Minnesota.

picture of Liberians in US

picture of Liberians in US

As intensifying violence in Ivory Coast threatens to spill into neighboring Liberia, fears are rising among some 3,000 Liberians without full immigration status in the United States that Washington may force them to return home when their temporary protected status (TPS) expires September.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security grants TPS to foreign nationals who are already in the U.S. but may not be able to return to their country due to an on-going armed conflict, environmental disaster, or in certain circumstances, if the country is unable to adequately handle the return of its nationals.

The Liberians are basing their fears on constant warnings from Ellen Margrethe Loj, Special Representative for the United Nations Secretary General in Liberia, about the escalation of violence in Ivory Coast. She told reporters in New York Wednesday that since post-election unrest erupted in Cote d’lvoire, tens of thousands of Ivorian refugees have been flooding across the border into Liberia.

She said the increased influx of refugees makes it easier for mercenaries from Ivory Coast to smuggle weapons into Liberia, still recovering from a 14-year civil war that ended in 2003.
More than 50,000 Ivorian refugees have streamed across the Liberian border since last December, straining the water and food supply in host Liberian villages.

In 2007, four years after the civil war in Liberia, Pres. George W. Bush gave certain Liberians an extension of their TPS for 18 months. Then, in March 2009, Pres. Barack Obama gave them an additional 12 months.

Several advocacy groups and supporters appealed, asking the Obama administration to give full refugee rights to the Liberians so that they could stay, but no legislation has been passed. In March 2010, however, Obama gave Liberians an additional 18 months, which will expire on 30 September, 2011.

“I can’t sleep anymore. I feel like I’m going to get crazy. This pressure is too much to bear,” says E. Brown, a Liberian woman in her early 50s, who requests that her full name not be disclosed.

With the current unstable political and economic situation in Liberia, Brown says it would be devastating for her and thousands of Liberian immigrant families with TPS if they are forced to return to their home country.

“We’ve already built our lives here,” Brown explains. “Some of our children were born and grew up in the United States. I can’t imagine myself to be separated from them.”

A 42-year-old Liberian cab driver in Chicago, who requested anonymity, says that he and others with temporary protected status “are treated like robots that have no feelings and freedom.”

“I’m very grateful to be here, to be alive,” he says, “v the [U.S.] government can just say, ‘Time is up. Pack your things and leave.’ That makes me very scared.”

Most Liberian immigrants with TPS have already bought a house, a car, and other properties, the cab driver says, and some have already established their own businesses.

“If you were in our position, would you want to go back? Would you want to experience violence again in your life?” he asks.

Julia Nekessa Opoti, publisher of Kenyaimagine.com and a reporter for Twin Cities Daily Planet who covers Liberian issues, says that many Liberian immigrants have deliberately failed to renew their temporary protected status and now are undocumented.

“They think that if they renew their TPS, they will be in the system, which will be easy to track where they are,” Opoti explains. “Others didn’t renew their employment authorization document (EAD) because they could not simply afford the application fees.”

While the Liberian community is robust and vital to the local economy, especially in Minnesota, Opoti says that Liberian leaders are not aggressive enough to mobilize themselves and push for legislation that will solve the problem.

“Liberian community leaders will only act when the extension of TPS is about to expire,” Opoti says. “But even if the TPS gets another extension, it remains temporary.”

A 2008 Concordia University study, “Ethnic Capital and Minnesota’s Future: People of Liberian Origin in Minnesota,” found that nationally, Liberians pay an estimated $441 million in personal taxes, almost equal to the GDP of Liberia.

In Minnesota alone, the study found, Liberian immigrant workers, who are concentrated in the health care sector, raised the state’s earnings by $492 million.
And, if more than 3,000 Liberian workers were to leave the local economy, this would result in more than $300 million in lost state revenue, the study indicated.

“It’s clear that Liberia is still struggling from the war–and it’s not helpful for Liberians with TPS to return,” says Douglas Johnson, executive director of the Center for Victims and Torture.

“We feel that the Liberian government is not politically and economically capable yet to take these Liberians back. It will create more instability.”

Johnson, who works with immigrants who have experienced severe violence and trauma, believes that “the fears and re-traumatization of Liberians who were able to escape the war but now may have to return is unimaginable.”

“With TPS, it’s like having a stage-four cancer,” says the cab driver.

“You know that you have only 18 months to live. You survive only when someone finds a cure. I hope Obama will find that cure for us.”

But, with fingers crossed, Brown hopes Obama will give her and fellow Liberians with TPS full rights as refugees and displaced individuals, so they can apply for permanent residency after a year.

“We’re good people,” Brown says. “We work hard.”