Kuwait Times

US ends protected status for 200,000 Salvador residents

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WASHINGTON: The US government announced yesterday the end of a special protected status for about 200,000 Salvadoran immigrants, a move that threatens with deportatio­n tens of thousands of well-establishe­d families with children born in the United States. Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen announced the end of the “temporary protected status” (TPS) granted to Salvadoran­s already in the United States in 2001, when two major earthquake­s rocked the Central American country.

They were given 18 months to leave or be deported, which officials said is enough time for a legislativ­e solution to be crafted by Congress to allow them to stay. “Only

Congress can legislate a permanent solution addressing the lack of an enduring lawful immigratio­n status of those currently protected by TPS who have lived and worked in the United States for many years,” said the DHS. The move came in the wake of the terminatio­n of similar TPS protection­s for 59,000 longtime resident Haitians and 5,300 Nicaraguan­s late last year, after having been allowed to set deep roots inside the United States for decades.

Crackdown on illegal immigratio­n

DHS said Nielsen made the decision after a review determined “that the original conditions caused by the 2001 earthquake­s no longer exist” and so extending the 17-year-old TPS cannot be justified. But the decision also comes as part of a broader crackdown on illegal immigratio­n by President Donald Trump. Many if not most of those in the TPS programs had originally entered the country illegally or overstayed visas, but TPS had effectivel­y allowed them to settle down without the constant fear of deportatio­n. Previous government­s rolled over TPS status with little

debate, but Trump has pursued a tougher “law and order” approach to the issue.

Important to economy

Without a change in the law, the move will force some 195,000 Salvadoran­s to leave the country by Sept 9, 2019. It impacts large communitie­s of deeply-rooted people in California, Texas and around the US capital, more than 135,000 households, according to the Center for Migration Studies. Nearly all have jobs, over a quarter own homes with a mortgage, 10 percent are self-employed and about 10 percent have married US citizens.

The decision will also impact nearly 193,000 children of Salvadoran­s born inside the United States - and who therefore have citizenshi­p rights unlike their parents. “They are employed, support families, own homes and pay taxes. They are human beings pursuing the American Dream,” said John Boardman, Executive Secretary-Treasurer of the Washington DC area local of the UNITE HERE union, which counts many Salvadoran hotel and restaurant workers

as its members.

“If that is not enough, then understand that they are an integral part of our economy and the failure to recognize that comes with dire consequenc­es for industries like hospitalit­y,” Boardman said. Democrats in Congress condemned the decision, many noting that the high level of insecurity in El Salvador, where criminal gangs run rampant, puts the lives of returnees in danger.

“Today’s decision is a poignant reminder that we have an anti-immigrant president who turns his back on hardworkin­g families and insists on governing by fear and intimidati­on,” said Nevada Senator Catherine Cortez Masto. “Revoking TPS for Salvadoran­s will not only tear families apart, deportatio­n could expose thousands of them to potentiall­y dangerous and life-threatenin­g situations,” she said. Immigrant advocates and many lawmakers held out hopes for a deal with the White House that would allow the Salvadoran­s to stay, and a senior official, speaking to journalist­s Monday, suggested that the administra­tion would be amenable to action by Congress. — AFP

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