Liberia's President George Weah has called for the removal of a "racist" clause in the constitution which restricts citizenship to black people.
The clause was "unnecessary, racist and inappropriate", the ex-football star said in his first State of the Nation address since being elected president.
He also pledged to scrap the law that prohibits foreigners owning land, reports the BBC.
Liberia was founded by freed US slaves in 1847 as "a refuge and a haven for freed men of colour".
Its constitution defines black people in the language of the time, as "persons who are Negroes or of Negro descent".
Other communities, like the estimated 4,000 Lebanese people who have lived in Liberia for generations, are barred from citizenship and, by extension, land ownership.
The restrictions introduced at the time were no longer necessary, Weah said, adding that he also wanted a ban on dual citizenship to be abolished.
"It contradicts the very definition of Liberia, which is derived from the Latin word 'liber', meaning 'liberty'," he said.
Some see the proposed change as long overdue.
But others, he adds, do not see it as a priority and want to see critical intervention on bringing the cost of living down.
George Weah, the 1995 Fifa World Player of the Year, is the first former sports star to be elected president.
He won elections in December by a landslide, defeating then Vice-President Joseph Boakai.
The former AC Milan and Chelsea player succeeded Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Africa's first elected female president who stepped down after two terms.
In his address in parliament on Monday, Weah also announced that he would be taking a pay cut of 25% because the government and the economy were "broke".
"Our currency is in free fall; inflation is rising, unemployment is at an unprecedented high and our foreign reserves are at an all-time low," he said.
He asked MPs to "follow my lead" and agree to a pay cut.
"Let us all remember that we were elected to serve the Liberian people and not to be masters of them," Weah said in an address that was interrupted by wild applause.