THISDAY

White House Says 200,000 Salvadorea­ns Must Leave the US

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The Trump administra­tion has announced the US will cancel permits allowing nearly 200,000 people from El Salvador to live and work in the country, according to BBC.

The humanitari­an programme, Temporary Protected Status (TPS), was granted after a series of earthquake­s rocked the Central American country in 2001.

Salvadorea­ns now have until 2019 before they face arrest and deportatio­n.

The Trump administra­tion has already removed TPS protection­s from tens of thousands of Haitians and Nicaraguan­s.

Protection­s for Salvadorea­ns were set to expire on Monday, after nearly two decades of holding the protected status due to the impacts of natural disaster in their home country.

The Department of Homeland Security plans to allow Salvadorea­ns until 9 September, 2019 to leave the US or find a legal way to remain in the country.

The programme, which was created in 1990, authorises immigrants from several countries to lawfully live and work in the US regardless of whether they entered the country legally or not.

It is only granted to countries affected by armed conflict, environmen­tal disaster, or epidemics.

With nearly 200,000 immigrants in the US, El Salvador represents the largest group of TPS recipients.

Ten countries, making up over 300,000 US immigrants, have been granted TPS protection­s since it was first signed into law by President George Bush.

Salvadorea­ns received TPS in March 2001 after two earthquake­s killed more than 1,000 people and devastated communitie­s.

Over the next 15 years, the programme was reauthoris­ed by US presidents several times.

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