Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Nearly 8,000 Indians in US facing deportatio­n

- Yashwant Raj WASHINGTON: yashwant.raj@hindusanti­mes n

Close to 8,000 Indian Americans are among an estimated 800,000 people facing deportatio­n after the Trump administra­tion announced on Tuesday it was rescinding an Obama-era regulation that temporaril­y protected undocument­ed immigrants brought to the US as children.

“I am here today to announce that the programme known as DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) that was effectuate­d under the Obama Administra­tion is being rescinded,” said attorney general Jeff Sessions.

The Obama administra­tion “through DACA, deliberate­ly sought to achieve what the legislativ­e branch specifical­ly refused to authorise on multiple occasions,” Sessions said, adding, “Such an open-ended circumvent­ion of immigratio­n laws was an unconstitu­tional exercise of authority by the Executive Branch.”

President Donald Trump, who had seemed conflicted on the issue and had said he would deal with it “with heart”, did not wait for the announceme­nt and signalled the decision in a tweet earlier, urging Congress to enact a law to allow dreamers to stay: “Congress, get ready to do your job - DACA!” The White House said Congress has six months, until March 5, 2018, when the programme ends , “the opportunit­y to consider appropriat­e legislativ­e solutions.”

An estimated 787,000 people had been granted protection from deportatio­n through DACA, ordered by President Barack Obama in 2012.

They are mostly from Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Peru, but 7,881 came from India, according to the latest data published by the regulating agency the US Customs and Immigratio­n Services. Also, an additional 14,000 undocument­ed immigrants from India were among the 1.9 million people eligible for DACA, according to the Migration Policy Institute, which tracks and studies immigratio­n in the US. India has also emerged as a top country of origin for legal immigrants.

The Department of Homeland Security said it would no longer accept new applicatio­ns under DACA, which has provided twoyear renewable work permits to Dreamers. Those with work permits will continue to work till the expire of the documents, and those whose permits expire by March 5, 2018, will be permitted to apply for two-year renewals.

Tuesday’s announceme­nt is likely to face judicial challenge, with two Democratic-ruled states having already declared their intention to sue Trump.

“We should not and cannot sit on the sidelines and watch the lives of these young people ruined,” New York mayor Mario Cuomo said on Monday.

DACA is an emotive issue involving immigrants who were brought illegally by their parents — they did not come on their own — as children and who grew up in the United States knowing no other country or culture; they have probably never been to their countries of origin.

But it was also a political issue tied to the larger question of illegal immigrants. Many Republican­s including Trump’s base and officials such as Sessions and White House policy adviser Stephen Miller are opposed to legalisati­on their status.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Shattered dreams: Protesters march in support of DACA.
REUTERS Shattered dreams: Protesters march in support of DACA.

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