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The United States has ended federal protections shielding thousands of migrants from Nicaragua and Honduras from deportation, ...
The Trump administration said Monday it will soon revoke the legal immigration status of more than 70,000 immigrants from ...
The move comes after a federal judge in New York last week blocked the Trump administration from ending temporary legal ...
Some 76,000 people from Nicaragua and Honduras were covered by TPS, which provides protection from deportation and grants ...
Temporary Protected Status was never meant to last a quarter of a century,' the Department of Homeland Security said in a ...
Altogether, the TPS terminations for Honduras, Nicaragua, and Nepal will strip legal status and protections from approximately 61,000 people—51,000 from Honduras, 7,200 from Nepal, and 2,900 ...
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security announced Monday it has ended Temporary Protected Status for two Central American ...
The Trump administration said Monday it will soon revoke the legal immigration status of more than 70,000 immigrants from Honduras and Nicaragua.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security ends the Temporary Protected Status designation for Honduras and Nicaragua.
The United States has ended federal protections shielding thousands of migrants from Nicaragua and Honduras from deportation, angering immigration and civil rights advocacy groups.
The Trump administration insists conditions have improved enough in Honduras and Nicaragua to send migrants protected from deportation back to those countries — but those groups disagree and ...