Judge rules against Trump and extends deportation protections for 60,000 immigrants | US immigration

A federal judge decided on the plans of the Trump administration and a temporary protected status (TPS) for 60,000 people, including Nepal, Honduras and Nicaragua from Central America and Asia.
TPS is a protection that can be given to people from various nations in the United States by the internal security secretary, allowing them to be deported and work.
The Trump management is trying to eliminate protection in an aggressive way, making it suitable for lifting more people. It is part of a wider effort to realize the mass deportation of immigrants.
Internal Security Secretary Kristi Noem, the conditions in their homeland, if it is considered to be insecure if it is considered to be insecure to return due to natural disaster, political instability or other dangerous conditions. Noem decided to end the guards for tens of thousands of honduran and Nicaragua after determining that the conditions in their homeland no longer guarantee them.
The secretary said that the two countries have made “important progress ında in getting rid of the hurricane of 1998, one of the most deadly Atlantic storms in history.
The estimated 7,000 appointment from Nepal was planned to end on August 5, while the guards allowing 51,000 hondura and about 3,000 Nicaragua in the US for more than 25 years would end on 8 September.
The US regional judge Trina L. Thompson in San Francisco did not set an expiration date, but decided to keep the guards in place. The next hearing is on November 18th.
In a sharply written order, Thompson said that the administration ended the protection of immigrant status without the objective review of the conditions of the country, such as political violence in Honduras and the effect of recent hurricanes and storms in Nicaragua.
If the guards are not expanded, immigrants may suffer from the loss of employment, health insurance, the risk of deportation to other countries without their families, and the termination of the TPS from Nepal, Honduras and Nicaragua will result in a loss of 1.4 billion dollars to the economy.
“Freedom of living without fear, the opportunity to freedom and the American dream. This is looking for all plaintiffs. Instead, they are told to atone for their races, to leave because of their names and purify their blood,” he said.
National TPS Alliance lawyers argued that Noem’s decisions were predetermined by President Donald Trump’s campaign promises and motivated by racial Animus.
Thompson admitted by saying that Noem and Trump continued to ım discriminatory belief that some migratory populations would replace the white population ”.
“The color is neither a poison nor a crime,” he wrote.
The defendant group, who sued, said that designers usually had a year to leave the country, but in this case they received much less.
At the hearing on Tuesday, the plaintiff’s lawyer Ahilan Arulantham said, “They gave them two months to leave the country for two months. Terrible.”
Honduras Foreign Minister Javier said that the decision through the social platform X was “good news ..
“The decision acknowledges that the decisions are trying to exercise their rights to life in freedom and fearless,” the decision of the country is, “the decision is”. The authority said the government will continue to support the Honduran in the United States through the consulate network.
In the meantime, in Nicaragua, when the government cut thousands of non -governmental organizations and imprisoned political opponents fled hundreds of thousands of exiles. Nicaragua President Daniel Ortega and his wife and President Rosario Murillo consolidated full control in Nicaragua since Ortega returned to power twenty years ago.
The extensive effort of the republican government’s pressure on migration goes by eliminating the guards that allow people to live and work temporarily in the United States in the pursuit of people who are illegal in the country.
The Trump administration terminated the guards for thousands of people from approximately 350,000 Venezuelalı, 500,000 hait, more than 160,000 Ukrainians and Afghanistan and Cameroon and Cameroon. Some have cases waiting in federal courts.
The government argued that Noem has a clear authority on the program and that its decisions reflect the goals of administration in the fields of migration and foreign policy.
“This is not to be permanent,” said William Weiland, the lawyer of the Ministry of Justice, said.