Title
Calling on President Barack Obama to Extend for Eighteen Months Beyond March 31, 2010 the Deferred Enforced Departure Status of Liberian Immigrants Currently Residing in the United States.
Body
WHEREAS, Many Liberian immigrants came to the U.S. to escape human rights abuses and the brutal armed conflict in their homeland; and
WHEREAS, Deferred Enforced Departure (DED) Status currently protects certain Liberians from deportation; and
WHEREAS, There are an estimated three-thousand six-hundred Liberians currently residing legally in the United States who will have to leave by March 31, 2010, if DED status is not extended; and
WHEREAS, The United States has a special historical relationship with the Liberian Nation established in 1822 by former slaves of the United States. The first eight presidents of Liberia were born in the U.S. and the national language of Liberia is English; and
WHEREAS, Liberia has been a strategic and military ally, particularly during the second world war when Liberia provided access to rubber and served as a transit point for U.S. troops; and
WHEREAS, Political unrest in Liberia between 1979 and 2003 forced hundreds of thousands of Liberians to flee to the United States because of violence and oppression; and
WHEREAS, Some two-hundred and seventy-thousand Liberians reside here legally with large Liberian communities located in Pennsylvania, California, Georgia, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island and Oklahoma; and
WHEREAS, Liberian immigrants have painstakingly rebuilt their lives here, establishing families and businesses, and sending money back to family members in Liberia. Expiration of DED status threatens to tear apart families and possibly entire communities; and
WHEREAS, While the political situation in Liberia has improved, it is not yet capable of absorbing the 3600 Liberians who would be forced to leave the U.S. if the extension of DED status is not granted; now there...
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