US President Donald Trump decided Tuesday to end the protected status of thousands of Liberian migrants to the United States and gave them a year to leave the country.
It’s the latest of similar moves, after more than 250,000 Salvadorans, Haitians and Nicaraguans lost their protected status under an administration which has made cracking down on immigration a priority.
In 1991, when the West African country was in the grip of civil war, some Liberians living in the US were given “temporary protected status” to allow them to remain in safety.
Then in 1999 approximately 10,000 of them were made eligible for “deferred enforced departure,” or DED, by then-president Bill Clinton, allowing them to continue to build new lives.
Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama have periodically renewed the DED status, but Trump has now decided to allow it to expire, deeming Liberia safe for returnees.
Trump has taken a tough stance on immigration in general and, in reported private conversations, an even tougher stance on Africans from what he has reportedly deemed “shithole countries.”
The latest grace period expires on March 31, but Trump said in a letter to the Department of Homeland Security that he would accord the Liberians a 12-month “wind-down” period to prepare their departure.
“Through consultation with appropriate executive departments and agencies and my advisors, I have been informed that conditions in Liberia have improved,” Trump wrote.
“Liberia is no longer experiencing armed conflict and has made significant progress in restoring stability and democratic governance,” he argued.
It is not clear how many of the original 10,000 DED recipients may have died, moved on voluntarily or been granted another form of legal US residency — but the rest face an uncertain future.
Opponents of Trump’s move warned it would uproot many who had made new and productive lives for themselves in the United States.
Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar, a Democrat, noted on Twitter that, thanks to the previous presidents’ DED extensions, the Liberians had been living in the United States legally since 1992.
“Many work in Minnesota hospitals and nursing homes,” she wrote. “I won’t give up this fight. We have a year.”
For the first time, Ethiopia has picked a leader from the Oromo ethnic group that drove years of anti-government protests, and analysts say Abiy Ahmed faces a tricky task of reconciliation and reform.
The 42-year-old former minister of science and technology will take the reigns of one Africa’s fastest growing economies after more than two years of protests and political turmoil that led to Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn’s shock resignation last month.
But analysts say Abiy cannot stabilise Ethiopia unless he convinces the country’s long-serving ruling coalition to change its authoritarian ways.
First on his agenda, they say, should be repealing a widely criticised state of emergency imposed after Hailemariam’s resignation last month.
“Lifting the state of emergency is, I think, the first or most important step. Without that, there is no reform agenda,” said Awol Allo, an Ethiopian political commentator who teaches law in Britain.
Ethiopia’s spiral into crisis began in late 2015 when Oromo activists who have long complained of marginalisation condemned a government development plan they felt was unfair.
This sparked protests that would spread across the country and cause hundreds of deaths and tens of thousands of arrests.
Their grievances were targeted at the all-powerful Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), the coalition of four ethnically based parties which has ruled Ethiopia since chasing the communist Derg regime from power in 1991.
The government declared a 10-month state of emergency in October 2016 to stop the protests, but many from the Oromo and the second-largest ethnic group the Amhara still feel alienated from a government they criticise for locking up dissidents and ignoring the demands of local communities.
“His priority should be to calm the country and, secondly, he needs to address the questions of the youth because the young people are the ones that can help our country,” Hana Dabele, a data encoder in the capital Addis Ababa, said of Abiy.
A process of secrecy
After organising a mass release of jailed politicians and journalists last January in a reaction to the public disenchantment, Hailemariam made the surprise decision to resign.
Shortly after, Abiy was elevated to the top post of the Oromo Peoples’ Democratic Organization (OPDO), the party representing Oromos in the EPRDF, as the coalition scrambled to find a successor.
Long seen as a tool of more powerful EPRDF factions, the OPDO had raised its political clout last year by reaching out to the protesters.
Abiy, then a top OPDO official, was part of that outreach, and Awol said believes he will continue that reform push as prime minister.
“When you look at the change that has taken place within the OPDO as an organisation, I think there is every reason to believe that Ahmed will … push some of the reform agenda set up by his own party,” Awol said.
Abiy’s election as party chairman was made by 180 top EPRDF officials in a vote behind closed doors about which few details have been released.
While some analysts believe the vote was swayed by the protests, a former diplomat in Ethiopia also highlighted the central role Oromos play in the rapidly growing economy, and the EPRDF’s desire to have Ethiopia, still one of Africa’s poorest countries, reach middle-income status by 2025.
With the entire process done in secret, Ethiopian political analyst Hallelujah Lulie said it’s unclear what promises Abiy made to other EPRDF parties to gain their support.
“We don’t know on what terms … Abiy is coming to the post,” he said.
The struggle continues
Aside from a decision on the state of emergency, observers will be watching what happens to 11 high-profile dissidents who were arrested this week, some of whom had left prison last month in the prisoner release.
In the countryside, the protesters are waiting.
“I will be happy if (Abiy) responds to Oromo” demands, a protester who participated in demonstrations in the restive town of Ambo two years ago told AFP on condition of anonymity.
But if he doesn’t, the protester says “Oromo people (will) not give up the struggle.”
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