Liberians grapple with potential loss of U.S. legal status

Liberians grapple with potential loss of U.S. legal status

by Joseph Anthony
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Deferred Enforced Departure (DED) status holder Marie Zar prepares for work the day after U.S. President Donald Trump granted a one-year extension of her immigration status, in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, U.S., March 29, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

As snow blanketed African markets, churches and graves in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, in February, members of the Liberian community were praying fervently that this would not be their last winter in the United States.


A form of immigration status known as Deferred Enforced Departure (DED) โ€“ which had protected the migrants from deportation and allowed them to work legally โ€“ was due to expire in March, meaning they would have had to leave the country voluntarily or be deported.

It was all part of the effort by President Donald Trumpโ€™s administration to widen its crackdown on legal and illegal immigration to the United States.

Days before the March deadline, Trump granted Liberians a reprieve to last through March 30, 2020. Though relieved, community members recognized that the clock was simply reset for the thousands of Liberians who fled civil war and instability in their home country in the 1990s and early 2000s.

Marie Zar, 52, who has been in the United States for nearly two decades, holds DED status. Like many Liberians in Minnesota, she works in the healthcare industry. Sheโ€™s a nurseโ€™s assistant, who also picks up shifts at the local hospital as an interpreter for Liberian patients.

The money she makes supports nearly two dozen family members in Liberia. She said her familyโ€™s lives will be upended if her DED status ends.

โ€œMy nieces are going to school from the money I make here,โ€ Zar said. โ€œWe donโ€™t know whatโ€™s going to happen. Weโ€™re not sure whatโ€™s going to happen to us.โ€


Famatta Zeon, 43, a local Liberian organizer with DED status, had worked furiously throughout winter to lobby the government and raise awareness of her communityโ€™s plight.

โ€œThere are some families who have been here 23, 25 years on this status,โ€ she said. โ€œWeโ€™ve worked here, weโ€™ve paid our taxes, we have homes here. We donโ€™t want our children to be put in the system here. We have tried our honest best to work here and not be dependent on the system.โ€

But Zeon lamented: โ€œHeโ€™s the only one that can put that gavel down,โ€ referring to President Donald Trump. โ€œGive us … a clear pathway to citizenship. Weโ€™re taxpayers, weโ€™re not problems.โ€

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