Taranaki Daily News

US scraps protection­s for Salvadoran immigrants

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UNITED STATES: The Trump administra­tion’s decision to end special protection­s for about 200,0000 Salvadoran immigrants filled many Salvadoran families with dread yesterday, raising the possibilit­y that they will be forced to abandon their roots in the US and return to a violent homeland they have not known for years, even decades.

Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen gave Salvadoran­s with temporary protected status until September 9, 2019, to leave the US or face deportatio­n.

El Salvador becomes the fourth country since President Donald Trump took office to lose protection under the program, which provides humanitari­an relief for people whose countries are hit with natural disasters or other strife.

The decision, while not surprising, was a severe blow to Salvadoran­s in New York, Houston, San Francisco and other major cities that have welcomed them since at least the 1980s.

Guillermo Mendoza, who came to the US in 2000, when he was 19 years old, was anguished about what to do with his wife and two children who are US citizens.

``What do I do? Do I leave the country and leave them here? That is a tough decision,’' said Mendoza, a safety manager at Shapiro & Duncan, a mechanical contractor company in Rockville, Maryland, near Washington.

Orlando Zepeda, who came to the US in 1984 fleeing civil war in El Salvador, said the lack of surprise does not ease the sting for the 51-year-old Los Angeles-area man who works in building maintenanc­e and has two American-born children.

``It’s sad, because it’s the same story of family separation from that time, and now history repeats itself with my children,’' Zepeda said in Spanish.

Many immigrants hope Congress can deliver a long-term reprieve by September 2019. If that fails, they face a grim choice: return to El Salvador voluntaril­y or live in the US illegally under an administra­tion that has dramatical­ly increased deportatio­n arrests.

The action presents a serious challenge for El Salvador, a country of 6.2 million people whose economy counts on money sent by wage earners in the US. Over the past decade, growing numbers of Salvadoran­s - many coming as families or unaccompan­ied children - have entered the United States illegally through Mexico, fleeing violence and poverty. –AP

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