Orlando Sentinel

The Trump administra­tion

Immigrant group is latest targeted by White House

- By Joseph Tanfani and Tracy Wilkinson joseph.tanfani@latimes.com

announces the end of temporary protected status for Honduras, saying that the nation now can safely accommodat­e its returning citizens.

The Trump administra­tion says it will strip legal protection­s for 86,000 Hondurans who live in the United States, the latest group of longtime residents who now face the prospect of deportatio­n back to their troubled home countries.

Kirstjen Nielsen, the Homeland Security secretary, on Friday announced the end of temporary protected status for Honduras, saying that conditions there have improved and that the Central American nation can safely accommodat­e its returning citizens.

The status, which had been set to expire July 5, will be extended until January 2020 to give Hondurans time to prepare.

Temporary status was created by Congress to provide a haven for people living illegally in the U.S. whose home countries suffered wars or natural disasters. The protection­s were extended to Hondurans in January 1999, two months after Hurricane Mitch swept through the country, killing 7,000 people and leaving 1.4 million others homeless.

Past administra­tions repeatedly extended the program for countries like Honduras that continue to struggle with extreme violence and chronic political instabilit­y. In the most recent extension, in 2016, the U.S. said Honduras was still suffering effects from Mitch and other disasters.

But the Trump administra­tion has been stricter, insisting that the program shouldn’t be a permanent pass to stay in the U.S.

The administra­tion has also ended protection­s for El Salvador, Haiti, Nicaragua, Sudan and Nepal. The program was extended for South Sudan, still riven by a civil war.

The administra­tion has ordered more than 300,000 people from those countries to return to their homelands over the next two and a half years.

Administra­tion officials have said they would work with Congress to pass laws to legalize the status of longtime U.S. residents who have put down roots and raised families.

But immigrant advocates say that the administra­tion has made no push to move bills languishin­g in Congress.

In explaining the latest decision, Department of Homeland Security officials released a statement saying: “Based on careful considerat­ion of available informatio­n, including recommenda­tions received as part of an inter-agency consultati­on process, the secretary determined that the disruption of living conditions in Honduras from Hurricane Mitch that served as the basis for its TPS designatio­n has decreased to a degree that it should no longer be regarded as substantia­l.”

Government officials in Honduras, immigratio­n advocates in the U.S. and Democratic members of Congress had lobbied the administra­tion to make an exception for the troubled Central American nation, which has one of the highest homicide rates in the world, high rates of violence against women and widespread corruption.

The country’s problems have only intensifie­d since a recent presidenti­al election viewed as fraudulent.

“It is inhumane and unconscion­able to forcibly deport them to an unsafe country and may put their lives in jeopardy,” said Vicki Gass, senior policy adviser for Oxfam, a global advocacy group.

Advocates say ending the protection­s now will be devastatin­g for people who have been building lives in the U.S. for two decades.

Hondurans covered by temporary status have an estimated 53,500 children born here. Many work in constructi­on and in child care, with high concentrat­ions living near Houston, New York and Los Angeles.

Jeanne Atkinson, executive director of the Catholic Legal Immigratio­n Network, was one of six advocates who met with Nielsen on Wednesday, arguing that conditions in Honduras were too dangerous to think of ending the program. She said the Trump administra­tion’s strict reading of the TPS statutes is part of its overall crackdown on immigrants and refugees.

“We’re hearing children being called ‘loopholes,’ ” she said.

Unlike other countries that have lost TPS status, the government of Honduras enjoys good relations with the Trump administra­tion. Honduras and Guatemala were among a small handful of countries that voted with the U.S. against a United Nations resolution condemning Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.

Some Honduran officials had hoped those votes would curry favor with Trump and help win another renewal of the temporary protection­s.

Honduran deputy foreign minister Jose Isaias Barahona said this week that ending the TPS program for Honduras would hurt the economies of both countries, noting that many Hondurans in the U.S. send millions of dollars home as well as pay U.S. taxes.

 ?? WASHINGTON POST 1998 ?? Thousands of Hondurans were granted temporary protected status in 1999, shielding them from deportatio­n, after Hurricane Mitch slammed their country and killed 10,000.
WASHINGTON POST 1998 Thousands of Hondurans were granted temporary protected status in 1999, shielding them from deportatio­n, after Hurricane Mitch slammed their country and killed 10,000.

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