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500,000 immigrant affected: Trump administrator cancels human parole for these 4 countries; Tells them to leave us

The Trump administration has started informing hundreds of thousands of migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela that their temporary permission to live and work in the United States has been canceled, and they should leave the country immediately, according to a statement by the Homeland Security Department (DHS) on Thursday.Notices are being sent through email to individuals entering the country under a human parole program launched by the Biden administration in October 2022. About 532,000 people in four countries were given two -year permit under the program, which allowed them to live and work in the US with financial sponsorship.The DHS confirmed that the letters their work authority and the legal status suggest that now “effective immediately” has ended. The agency encouraged the affected people to voluntarily leave through a mobile application called CBP Home, who promises a journey of a trip to a stipend and a payment of $ 1,000 when returning to his country. However, the department did not provide any details on the fact that it would distribute the departure to the track or payment.The decision follows the decision of the US Supreme Court last month that allowed the Trump administration to destroy the program, which the former President vowed to eliminate it, called it an example of “comprehensive misuse” of the human parole system.“This is a deeply unstable decision,” said Krishi O’Aara Vignarajah, president of the global refugee. “These are the people who have been played by the rules … they passed the security screening, paid for their journey, received the work authority, and started reconstructing their lives.”34 -year -old Cuba’s mother Zamora, who came to America in 2023 under the program, said she is afraid of detaining, while her child is in school. “I am afraid to return to Cuba, the situation there is very difficult,” he said. Zamora is demanding permanent residence through Cuba Adjustment Act, but has not yet received approval. “I am going to wait quietly without getting into trouble,” she said.

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