
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has entered into urgent diplomatic engagement with officials from the United States Embassy in Monrovia as Washington signals potential visa sanctions on Liberia over a series of immigration compliance concerns.
The dialogue was led by Assistant Minister for Public Affairs, Hon. Saywhar Nana Gbaa, who met with Mr. Nicolas Worden, Acting Consular Chief, and Mr. Raymond Stephens, Public Affairs Officer at the U.S. Embassy. The meeting focused on addressing serious issues flagged by the U.S. government that could result in stringent limitations across multiple visa categories within the next 50 days if not resolved.
According to embassy officials, the concerns stem from rising trends in visa abuse originating from Liberia, including non-immigrant visa overstays, fraudulent documentation, and misrepresentation of travel purposes, identity, or family ties by applicants. Mr. Worden noted that approximately 20% of Liberians granted non-immigrant visas to the U.S. fail to return after their authorized stay—a figure triggering elevated scrutiny and a spike in visa denials.
To respond proactively, the Government of Liberia has activated a high-level presidential task force, spearheaded by President Joseph Nyuma Boakai, Sr., and co-led by Foreign Minister Sara Beysolow Nyanti, tasked with coordinating Liberia’s official response. The task force has already submitted a work plan to the U.S. Embassy, including plans for public awareness campaigns aimed at educating citizens on visa regulations and the consequences of non-compliance.
U.S. officials acknowledged Liberia’s commitment to resolving the issue diplomatically and welcomed the early actions by the Boakai administration. However, they cautioned that unless measurable improvements are made within the prescribed period, sanctions could apply to tourist (B-2), business (B-1), student (F-1), fiancé (K-1), and other non-immigrant visa categories—including the widely sought Diversity Visa (DV) program. Lawful permanent residents would not be affected.
Liberia is one of 36 countries currently under review by the U.S. government. The scrutiny, which intensified under the Trump administration, is linked to broader concerns over identity verification systems, passport security, visa overstay rates, and cooperation in the repatriation of deportees.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs reaffirmed Liberia’s strong commitment to maintaining diplomatic ties with the United States and protecting its citizens’ international mobility. More updates are expected as negotiations continue and awareness efforts are rolled out.
By: David S. Johnson – Staff Reporter | TPA News Desk | editor@thepointafricanews.com
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