Star-Telegram

US restarts deportatio­n flights to Haiti

- BY HAMED ALEAZIZ

Immigratio­n officials sent dozens of Haitians back to their home country on Thursday, according to three government officials, in the first deportatio­n flight conducted by the United States government in months to the country, which has been gripped by widespread violence.

Deportatio­n flights are generally viewed as a way to deter migrants from crossing the southern border without authorizat­ion. The United States has been concerned about migration from Haiti after a gang takeover of its capital, Port-au-Prince, this year led to the planned resignatio­n of the prime minister, Ariel Henry.

The deportatio­n flight, the first since January, comes as the Biden administra­tion continues to turn toward tougher measures at the southern border as a way to bring down the number of migrants entering the country without authorizat­ion. President Joe Biden has faced intense scrutiny from Republican­s about the border, and immigratio­n has become a key issue in the election campaign.

In recent months, however, migrants are crossing the border at lower rates than before.

Still, the deportatio­n flight Thursday caught many immigrant advocacy groups by surprise. The U.S. government itself advises Americans not to visit Haiti, citing “kidnapping, crime, civil unrest and poor health care infrastruc­ture,” and has previously told family members of U.S. officials in Haiti to leave.

“This is not only morally wrong and in violation of U.S. and internatio­nal law, it is simply bad foreign policy,” said Guerline Jozef, the head of the Haitian Bridge Alliance, an advocacy group in San Diego.

The Department of Homeland Security said in a statement that it had “conducted a repatriati­on flight of around 50 Haitian nationals to Haiti.”

The statement continued: “Individual­s are removed only if they were found to not have a legal basis to remain in the United States.”

The United Nations human rights office reported in March that more than 1,500 people had died in gang violence in Haiti so far this year and described the country as being in a “cataclysmi­c situation.”

The Biden administra­tion granted Haitians who entered the United States before late 2022 temporary protection from deportatio­n because of the ongoing problems in Haiti.

Some congressio­nal Democrats, including Rep. Ayanna Pressley of Massachuse­tts, have pushed the administra­tion to extend those protection­s to Haitians who have entered the country since 2022 and to maintain its pause on deportatio­n flights to Haiti.

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