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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 ...
Department of Homeland Security ends Temporary Protected Status for Honduras, Nicaragua ...
While the TPS programs for El Salvador, Nicaragua, Nepal and Honduras are technically set to expire on Dec. 31, as outlined by a government announcement, DHS agreed to provide a 120-day wind down ...
Cassandra has lived and worked in the US over 20 years. Threats to her life have been made to her family and friends back in Nicaragua. It would be “suicide” to move back, she says.
TPS authorization for Nicaraguans, first granted in 1998, is set to end on July 5, 2025, affecting nearly 2,600 Nicaraguans migrants with temporary permission to live and work in the U.S.
President Donald Trump’s administration is cutting down on what’s known as Temporary Protected Status. These immigrants from the following countries may be next.
Unlike Haiti and Venezuela, which had their TPS status extended by President Joe Biden before he left office, Nicaragua’s circumstances are slightly different, Rocha said.
As a result of pending litigation challenging the Trump administration’s efforts to terminate TPS designations for six countries including El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua, the Department of ...
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced Monday that it would rescind protections from deportation for Nicaragua ...