U.S. to end protected status for
Nicaraguan immigrants in 2019
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[November 07, 2017]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United
States will end in January 2019 a special status given to 5,300
Nicaraguan immigrants that protects them from deportation, senior Trump
administration officials said on Monday.
They also said the program known as Temporary Protected Status, or TPS,
would be extended until July 2018 for about 86,000 Honduran immigrants,
but added it could then be terminated.
The decision to end TPS for Nicaraguans is part of President Donald
Trump's broader efforts to tighten restrictions on immigration.Hundreds
of thousands of illegal immigrants from across Central America live and
work in the United States, but some are protected from the threat of
deportation under the TPS program.
Thousands from both Nicaragua and Honduras were given the special status
in 1999 after Hurricane Mitch devastated Central America. In all, TPS
protects more than 300,000 people from nine countries living in the
United States.
Trump's administration was faced with a Monday deadline to announce its
decision on Nicaragua and Honduras.
Critics have complained the TPS program allows participants to
repeatedly extend their stays in 6-month to 18-month increments in case
of a natural disaster, civil strife or other emergencies in their
homelands.
In the case of Nicaragua, acting Homeland Security Secretary Elaine Duke
decided the conditions caused by Hurricane Mitch "no longer exist, and
thus, under the applicable statute, the current TPS designation must be
terminated," the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said in a
statement.
The TPS for thousands of Nicaraguans was due to expire on Jan. 5, 2018,
but it was delayed by 12 months "to allow for an orderly transition."
"This will provide time for individuals with TPS to seek an alternative
lawful immigration status in the United States, if eligible, or, if
necessary, arrange for their departure," the DHS statement said.
For Honduras, Duke concluded that the DHS needed more time and
information to make a determination, so the current TPS designation was
extended for six months to July 5, 2018.
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A U.S. flag flutters over top of the skyline of New York (R) and
Jersey City (L), as seen from Bayonne, New Jersey, August 6, 2011.
REUTERS/Gary Hershorn
Supporters of TPS slammed the administration's decisions.
UNITE HERE, a labor union representing hospitality industry workers,
condemned what it said was an "inhumane and immoral decision that
will have devastating impacts on hundreds of thousands of families,
and the American economy."
Asked whether the Nicaraguan TSP recipients would be subject to
deportation once their protection runs out, one administration
official said: "We prioritize criminal aliens and those who have a
final order of removal. Your typical TPS recipient will not fall
into those priorities."
"However we stand by our position that all persons who are here
illegally are eligible for removal, but they will not be targeted
for removal," he added.
The officials said the administration would support any effort by
the U.S. Congress to find a more permanent solution for the
Nicaraguans.
The other countries with TPS designations are El Salvador, Haiti,
Nepal, Somalia, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen. A decision on Haiti
and El Salvador is due later this month.
The program was enacted by Congress in 1990 to protect immigrants
fleeing war or natural disasters.
(Reporting by Eric Beech; Editing by Mohammad Zargham, Peter Cooney
and Jacqueline Wong)
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