Some angry residents of the Budumburam camp popularly known as the Liberian camp, have threatened to defy a directive to move out of the camp by Thursday, September 30.
The residents insist they have nowhere to move to and will face off with anyone who attempts to forcibly eject them.
According to them, the Liberia Embassy has neglected them since the Ghana government asked them to return to their home country.
Speaking in an interview some residents said, nothing will make them move out of the camp adding that they are not criminals as being speculated by Chiefs and Elders of the area.
They disclosed that the Gomoa East Assembly has given some refugees 400 cedis each to seek a new place to live.
However, some other Liberian Refugees and residents of the camp have started packing their belongings out of the camp.
They accused the government of deception, stating that they were promised houses and money but those promises have not been fulfilled by the government.
After the beginning of the Liberian civil war in 1989, the Ghanaian government established the Buduburam refugee camp in 1990 in response to the arrival of displaced Liberians in the country. After the final ceasefire agreement of the war in 2003, UNHCR repeatedly urged the repatriation of refugees to Liberia.
The pace of repatriation, however, was sluggish among the remaining Liberians in Ghana due to the precarious political and economic environment in Liberia.
Many Liberian refugees in Ghana had been hoping for third-country resettlement but, with peace restored in Liberia, most no longer met the criteria for resettlement.
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