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532,000 migrants face deportation after Trump revokes protections

A US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer looks on during an anti-immigration op. in Escondido, Calif., July 8, 2019. (Photo by AP)

The Trump administration has plans to revoke the legal status of potentially more than half-a-million immigrants currently living in the United States.

An  order issued on Friday by the Department of Homeland Security, which will be effective on April 24, cuts short a two-year humanitarian “parole" program granted to immigrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela.

The move follows an earlier Trump administration decision to end what it called the "broad abuse" of humanitarian parole, a long-standing legal tool presidents have used to allow people from countries where there's war or political instability to enter and temporarily live in the United States.

A total of 532,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelan immigrants, who entered the United States in the past three years, are vulnerable to potential deportation around that date.

The Trump administration has also ended a contract that provides legal aid to migrant children entering the country without a parent or guardian, raising concerns that children will now be forced to go through the complex US legal system without help from any grown-up.

President Donald Trump had promised on his campaign trail to deport millions of people who are in the US illegally, and as president, he has also been ending legal pathways for immigrants to enter the US and to stay.

His anti-immigration policy has repeatedly been challenged across the United States by federal judges.

The Trump administration is already being sued by a group of American citizens and immigrants for ending the humanitarian parole, seeking to reinstate the program for the four nationalities.


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