Kuwait Times

Haitians face deportatio­n as 2010 quake reprieve expires

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Bernedy Prosper is afraid his 23-yearold son Harold will die if he is deported from the United States back to Haiti. Prosper, 52, had hoped Harold could benefit from a special status granted to Haitian immigrants in 2010 after a devastatin­g earthquake struck the impoverish­ed Caribbean nation. Instead, Harold is one of more than 4,000 Haitians awaiting deportatio­n due to a sudden policy reversal late last year as then-president Barack Obama was preparing to leave office.

With President Donald Trump now in power, elected on a vow to build a wall on the Mexican border and halt illegal immigratio­n, Harold’s situation looks bleak. “I ran away for my life and now my kid had to do the same,” said a despairing Prosper as he stood in an immigratio­n aid center in Little Haiti, the heart of the Haitian diaspora in dilapidate­d north Miami. Prosper himself arrived in Florida on a boat without immigratio­n documents in 2000 and obtained political asylum.

He tried to bring his son over to join him, but Harold got tired of waiting for the legal process to run its course, and decided to try his luck crossing the Mexican border illegally. Instead he was caught in San Diego, California, just as deportatio­ns of Haitians are ramping up dramatical­ly compared to last January when, according to government figures, only 267 Haitians were awaiting deportatio­n. “I believe that if he is put back to Haiti, I have no more son,” said Prosper, his head down and voice a low monotone. “I know they will kill him,” he said.

Haiti has improved

Haiti is the poorest country in the western hemisphere, and has not fully recovered from the earthquake-some 55,000 people still live in temporary housing, most in appalling conditions. But late last year, Obama decided Haitians no longer qualified for Temporary Protection Status (TPS), as the status reserved for victims of natural disasters is known. “The situation in Haiti has improved sufficient­ly to permit the US government to remove Haitian nationals on a more regular basis, consistent with the practice for nationals from other nations,” said then-Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson in announcing the policy change Sept 22.

A few weeks later, on October 4, Hurricane Matthew tore through southweste­rn Haiti. The powerful Category 4 hurricane killed more than 500 people, left thousands homeless, and triggered a cholera outbreak. US authoritie­s halted deportatio­ns for a month, but in early November began to “significan­tly expand removal operations,” Johnson said in a subsequent statement. Randy McGrorty, an attorney with Catholic Legal Services-a group that offers legal aid for immigrants-says it is inhumane to deport Haitians to their storm-ravaged, earthquake-damaged country.

The TPS will remain in effect until July, and Haitians who are already protected do not risk deportatio­n.But since October more than 1,600 other Haitians have been deported. “We get desperate phone calls from people. Unfortunat­ely there’s nothing we can do,” said Steve Forester, who works for the non-profit Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti. “It is simply wrong, insensitiv­e, immoral, even obscene, to be deporting people now, knowing the suffering of the people there and that the government does not have the ability in Haiti to care for these people,” he said.

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