Audio By Carbonatix
The U.S. is ending temporary legal status for citizens of Ethiopia in the United States, according to a government notice on Friday, as the Trump administration continues its crackdown on legal and illegal immigration.
"After reviewing country conditions and consulting with appropriate U.S. Government agencies, the Secretary determined that Ethiopia no longer continues to meet the conditions for the designation for Temporary Protected Status," Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in a notice posted in the Federal Register.
Temporary Protected Status is available to people whose home country has experienced a natural disaster, armed conflict or other extraordinary event. It provides eligible migrants with work authorisation and temporary protection from deportation.
The program was created in 1991, and under Biden, it was extended to cover about 600,000 Venezuelans and 521,000 Haitians. Noem reversed the extensions in February, saying they were no longer justified.
In recent months, the administration has removed the protective status for migrants from numerous countries, including Haiti, Myanmar, South Sudan, Syria and Venezuela. In November, Trump announced the termination of protection for Somalis in Minnesota.
Trump has made controlling immigration a central plank of his second White House term. Cancelling TPS protections is a boost to the administration's campaign to deport millions of people.
The cancellations have been challenged in court.
The Supreme Court in October cleared the way for the administration to revoke TPS for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan migrants in the United States, granting a request to put on hold a federal judge's ruling that Noem lacked the authority to terminate the status while litigation proceeds.
The Homeland Security department also said on Friday it was no longer processing legacy cases under the Cuban and Haitian family reunification parole program, according to a post in the Federal Register.
Those programs make it easier for U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents to bring family members into the country.
Latest Stories
-
Fire destroys heritage train at Ibrahim Mahama’s Red Clay Studio in Tamale
2 minutes -
Government seeks to rename NIB as BNI to avoid confusion – Interior Minister Muntaka
4 minutes -
High costs, no water and unemployment threatening industrial growth, says AGI president
6 minutes -
Gov’t to raise GH₵30bn through syndicated domestic bond to bail COCOBOD – Sagnarigu MP
15 minutes -
Brake failure claims life of trader in Kaase Gas tanker crash
19 minutes -
Majority, Minority clash over bill to revert NIB name to BNI and overhaul National Security structure
25 minutes -
Water crisis disrupting production – AGI president warns industrialisation at risk
30 minutes -
Office of Ga Mantse breaks silence on accident
32 minutes -
COCOBOD debt exceeded assets under NPP – Otokunor
38 minutes -
Samson Ahi labels Sehwi Wiawso cocoa protest politically engineered; points fingers at NPP
43 minutes -
Adongo accuses Akufo-Addo’s appointees of mismanaging COCOBOD; says they need ‘whipping’
48 minutes -
Trade Ministry denounces terror attack on Ghanaian traders in Burkina Faso
54 minutes -
State failed to issue travel advisory before Burkina Faso killings – Ntim Fordjour
59 minutes -
Adongo dismisses COCOBOD bailout call, blames crisis on past Akufo-Addo government
59 minutes -
GRA prepares to meet GH¢360bn revenue target for 2028
1 hour
