Salvadorans say going home not an option
after U.S. axes protection
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[January 10, 2018]
By Joseph Ax and Mica Rosenberg
RED BANK, N.J. (Reuters) - Three decades
after fleeing civil war in his native El Salvador, Luis Munoz has built
a life for himself in the New Jersey coastal town of Red Bank, working
as a mechanic and raising three children with his wife.
Now Munoz and his adult kids may face deportation in 2019 along with
around 200,000 other Salvadorans, after the Trump administration said on
Monday they would no longer have legal protection under a program known
as Temporary Protected Status (TPS).
"I cannot go back to my country," Munoz, 58, said on Monday evening,
sitting on the couch with his bichon frise dog, Hachi, in the apartment
he shares with his wife, an immigrant from Belize.
Not only did he get death threats before he left El Salvador in the
1980s, he said, but current gang violence makes going back too dangerous
and the ailing economy offers few opportunities.
Salvadoran families across the United States faced an anguished choice,
with those like Munoz saying a return to their crime-ravaged country was
not an option.
Many had feared an end to their protected status after the Trump
administration cut TPS for Nicaraguans and Haitians as part of its
broader push to tighten immigration laws.
TPS, which began in 1990, offers protection from deportation to
immigrants already in the United States, including those who entered
illegally, from countries affected by natural disasters, civil conflicts
and other problems.
Salvadorans were admitted following a pair of destructive earthquakes in
2001. U.S. officials on Monday said TPS by definition was not intended
to become permanent and that the unsafe conditions created by the
earthquakes no longer exist. They said the protections would expire for
Salvadorans in September 2019.
Many of the recipients were not affected by the earthquakes but took
advantage of the program to gain legal status.
Ricardo Lemus, 38, crossed the Mexican border with his brother in 1997.
As a legal immigrant under TPS, he has started his own hardwood flooring
company in Rockland County, New York. He said he had put expansion plans
on hold while he determined whether he would lose his business.
"I don't have any options," said Lemus, who has three American-born
daughters and is not willing to take them to a country they have never
known. "I'm not sure yet what I can do."
Elba Perlera, 47, came to the United States illegally in 1997. As a
single mother, she intended to work for a few years in the United States
to earn money and then return to her young son, whom she left with her
mother.
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Luis Munoz from El Salvador speaks during an interview with media at
his home in Red Bank, New Jersey, U.S., January 8, 2018.
REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
But once she arrived, she said, it became more difficult to return. She
found work as a janitor, got married and had another child.
Her son, now 22, made it to the United States at age 15 after gangs
threatened him at his school and works in construction. Her
U.S.-born 11-year-old daughter wrote a handwritten letter to
lawmakers earlier this year pleading with them to protect TPS for
the sake of her parents.
Both Perlera and her Salvadoran husband were granted TPS status in
2001, allowing them to get driver's licenses, work permits and
better jobs.
"Now with this decision we could lose all that," she said.
She hopes Congress passes a legislative solution and plans to make
her case to lawmakers in Washington. She had no wish to return to El
Salvador.
"Life there is not easy, and the government is not prepared to take
people back," she said.
Like Lemus and Perlera, Munoz was not an earthquake victim. At the
time of the disasters, he was already in the United States, having
entered from Belize legally on a tourist visa and then overstaying
his time before applying to TPS.
His children, who were born in Belize and have TPS protection, have
virtually no connection with the country they may soon be forced to
repatriate to.
"Basically they would return to a world they do not know," Munoz
said.
Munoz fled El Salvador in the 1980s as a student, at a time when
many of his classmates were arrested or killed by the army for
suspected ties to leftist guerrillas. A day after a friend was
killed, Munoz's brother, who was in the army, called to warn him
that he would be next.
"There are too many sad memories for me there - all my friends, my
schoolmates were murdered just because they were young," Munoz said.
"They stopped the war but they were not able to establish peace or
security. No one would say it is better off now."
(Reporting by Joseph Ax and Mica Rosenberg; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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