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US Extends Temporary Protected Status for 6 Disaster-Hit Countries


FILE - A resident walking through a flooded street looks back at storm damage caused by Hurricane Eta in Planeta, Honduras, November 6, 2020.
FILE - A resident walking through a flooded street looks back at storm damage caused by Hurricane Eta in Planeta, Honduras, November 6, 2020.

Washington has agreed to prolong a set of temporary migration protections that allow immigrants from six countries to live in the United States, officials said Monday.

The so-called Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for some citizens of El Salvador, Haiti, Nicaragua, Sudan, Honduras and Nepal was extended by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) until at least October 2021.

TPS allows some foreigners whose home countries experience a natural disaster, armed conflict or other extraordinary event to remain in the United States and apply for work permits. The status must be renewed periodically in six- to 18-month intervals by the secretary of Homeland Security.

TPS has been in the crosshairs of Republican President Donald Trump's administration in recent months as it seeks to scale back humanitarian protections for hundreds of thousands of immigrants who were scheduled to be expelled from the United States in early March after a wind-down period.

The extension is part of an agreement between the administration and plaintiffs in related lawsuits not to terminate the protections as the lawsuits filter through the U.S. court system.

Democratic President-elect Joe Biden has pledged to protect enrollees from being returned to unsafe countries.

The Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

FILE - Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez answers questions from the Associated Press, August 13, 2019, as he leaves a meeting of the Organization of American States, in Washington.
FILE - Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez answers questions from the Associated Press, August 13, 2019, as he leaves a meeting of the Organization of American States, in Washington.

Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez said the extension would cover about 44,000 of the storm-ravaged Central American country's citizens living in the United States. He said he discussed the extension on a visit to Washington last week.

"In the United States, during the meeting with the acting secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (Chad Wolf), they told us that the TPS that was going to end in January will be extended," Hernandez said on national television.

Hondurans living in the United States have had access to TPS since the accord was brokered after Hurricane Mitch wreaked havoc on the impoverished Central American country in 1998.

Guatemala has also requested extended TPS protection for its citizens.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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