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General News of Sunday, 19 May 2024

Source: GNA

4,300 Liberians at Buduburam Camp to return home

Representatives of the Liberian Government with some member of the Liberian Community at Buduburam Representatives of the Liberian Government with some member of the Liberian Community at Buduburam

A total of 4,300 Liberians based at the Buduburam Refugee Camp in the Gomoa East District of the Central Region are expected to return to Liberia between May and June 2024.

This is part of the Liberian Government's plan, through the Liberia Refugee Repatriation Resettlement Commission, to repatriate its citizens from the camp.

The first cohort of the repatriation activity will commence on Tuesday, May 21, 2024, when 770 of them will be bussed from Ghana to Liberia.

This was disclosed at a pre-departure engagement between representatives of the Liberian Government and the Liberian Community at Buduburam.

Mr. Jeddi Armah, Deputy Minister of Legal Affairs of Liberia, who led the government delegation, said this was to bring closure to Liberian refugees living in Ghana.

He said the conversations around the repatriation process had been held and agreed upon between the two countries, Ghana and Liberia, since 2021.

"We have had fruitful engagements and discussions with the Ghanaian government throughout this period, and they have been giving us the necessary and needed support to undertake this exercise," he added.

Mr. Armah urged them to seize the opportunities and return to Liberia, saying the government had made provisions for their smooth repatriation and stay in their home country.

He said the camp was established as a safe haven for them during the war, thus it could no longer be a choice to stay in a place that was only meant to provide them with temporary sanctuary.

He admonished them to see the repatriation as a renewal process with many opportunities for them to join in the rebuilding of the Liberia they all envisioned and wanted.

Mr. Armah expressed his appreciation to the Government of Ghana and the citizenry for opening their arms and welcoming them in their time of dire need and distress.

Mr. Dennis Gwion, President of Liberians in Ghana, said the majority of them were prepared and ready to leave the camp, adding that the few who would stay were those who had stable employment and a place of abode outside the camp.

He said it was a voluntary process, where the people had chosen to go back to their home country.

He added there were more than 6,000 of them living at the camp.

Meanwhile, some of the residents who spoke to the Ghana News Agency expressed their eagerness to return to their home country, while a few of them also said they could not return now due to their education and work.

Wilmot Dweh, a resident at the camp, said he could not return now due to his tertiary education and the project he was undertaking at the camp.

He, however, expressed his willingness to return when he had completed his university education.

Madam Oretha Baba Russell, a resident who plied her trade as a hairdresser in Tema, said she had informed her employer about her departure.

She said she was hoping to return to Liberia with her children and start her own hairdressing business.

James Flovo, a resident motorrider, said he had lived all his life in Ghana and would continue to stay in the country.

He said his wife and children would return to Liberia, while he worked in Ghana to remit them for their upkeep.

The Liberia Camp, also known as Buduburam Camp, is a refugee camp established by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in 1990.

The 144-acre camp housed more than 12,000 Liberian refugees who fled their country during the first Liberian civil war between 1989-1996 and the second Liberian civil war from 1999–2003, as well as Sierra Leone refugees who fled their civil war between 1991–2002.