Los Angeles Times

A temporary reprieve for immigrants

- BY ANDREA CASTILLO

The Trump administra­tion has agreed to temporaril­y halt the terminatio­n of humanitari­an protection­s for more than 100,000 people from Honduras and Nepal, the American Civil Liberties Union has announced.

The decision revealed Tuesday comes exactly one month after the ACLU and other immigrant-rights advocates filed a class-action lawsuit against the administra­tion over its decision to end temporary protected status for immigrants from those two countries. In their lawsuit, the plaintiffs alleged that the decision by the Department of Homeland Security to end TPS was “motivated by racial animus.”

Protection­s were due to end in June for 15,000 people from Nepal and next January for 86,000 people from Honduras, leaving them vulnerable to deportatio­n.

The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco on behalf of six immigrants with TPS and two U.S. citizens who are children of beneficiar­ies. TPS is a form of humanitari­an relief granted to residents of countries devastated by natural disasters or war that allows beneficiar­ies to work legally while they remain in the U.S.

The program, created in 1990, applies to people from 10 countries. But the Trump administra­tion has announced the terminatio­n of TPS for 98% of those who have it.

In October, a U.S. district judge in San Francisco temporaril­y blocked the administra­tion from rescinding TPS for more than 300,000 immigrants from El Salvador, Haiti, Nicaragua and Sudan while their case plays out in court. The administra­tion is appealing that ruling to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

The Trump administra­tion canceled TPS for Honduras and Nepal after the first lawsuit was filed last year. Tuesday’s agreement essentiall­y groups the fate of the two cases.

The case of Ramos vs. Nielsen alleges that government officials illegally diverged from how all previous administra­tions had interprete­d TPS law as part of a broad effort to decrease the number of nonwhite immigrants in the U.S. Lawyers representi­ng the plaintiffs in Bhattarai vs. Nielsen, the case filed last month, made the same legal arguments.

Government lawyers said that those countries had sufficient­ly recovered from the original disasters and that TPS was never meant to be permanent. A Department of Justice spokesman last month said the decision to terminate TPS for Honduras and Nepal was “both lawful and reasonable.”

Under the agreement, TPS will remain in place for Honduran and Nepalese immigrants at least until the appeal in the Ramos case is decided. Lawyer Ahilan Arulananth­am with the ACLU of Southern California said oral arguments with the 9th Circuit probably will be set for this summer, giving TPS beneficiar­ies several months of reprieve.

 ?? SHAWN THEW EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? THE TRUMP administra­tion has halted its plan to end temporary protected status, or TPS, shielding immigrants from Honduras and Nepal from deportatio­n.
SHAWN THEW EPA/Shuttersto­ck THE TRUMP administra­tion has halted its plan to end temporary protected status, or TPS, shielding immigrants from Honduras and Nepal from deportatio­n.

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