House Dems push Biden to protect Haitians from deportation
The Biden administration faced fresh pressure Thursday to protect Haitians who are in the United States from being deported to a country that has endured increasing economic and political turmoil since a presidential assassination and devastating extreme weather last year.
In a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, Reps. Cori Bush (D-Mo.), Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.), and Mondaire Jones (D-N.Y.), along with 14 other House Democrats, urged a Temporary Protected Status (TPS) extension for Haitians not affected by Ramos v. Mayorkas, and redesignation for people who arrived in the United States after July 29, 2021.
“Haiti is currently experiencing one of its worst outbreaks of violence in decades,” the letter states. “The rule of law has effectively collapsed. Powerful gangs rule with impunity, and in some cases with government complicity.”
“For months, a gang blockade at Haiti’s principal fuel terminal crippled day-to-day operations, severely restricting the movement of medicine, food, and supplies,” the letter continues. “The situation paralyzed an already crippled economy in the country, where the inflation rate reached a staggering 30%.”
The letter adds that “this has all occurred amid a resurgence of cholera in the country, particularly in Haiti’s National Penitentiary in Port-au-Prince. Since October, the disease has killed at least 100 people and sickened 8,000 more, though experts say the numbers are likely higher.”
“Given the deteriorating situation in Haiti, this administration should prioritize humanitarian relief, especially given the positive impact that extending and redesignating Haiti for TPS will have for our nation,” the lawmakers argued, also highlighting how Haitians positively contribute to the American workforce.
House Democrats’ letter calling on the Biden administration to refrain from sending Haitians to “face an unprecedented crisis in their home country” was also sent to Secretary of State Antony Blinken and echoes recent demands from civil society.
More than 400 groups—including the Florida Immigrant Coalition (FLIC)—sent Biden, Blinken, and Mayorkas a letter last month, stressing the need for urgent action given that “the TPS designation for Haiti will expire on February 3, 2023.”
FLIC renewed its call for action in a statement Thursday, warning that “Haitians are in mortal danger” and asserting that extending and redesignating TRS “is a matter of life and death!”
Last month, a Florida-bound vessel overloaded with almost 200 Haitians—including 46 children—struck a sandbar. After the rescue effort, the U.S. Coast Guard returned nearly all of them “to a Haiti plagued by a rapidly spreading cholera,” noted FLIC’s co-executive director, Tessa Petit.
Petit, who immigrated to Florida from Haiti, stressed that “you do not have to be Haitian to feel outrage at the blatant human rights violations currently perpetrated by both the United States and the Dominican Republic on Haitian nationals.”
Along with FLIC’s TPS demands, the group is calling on the Biden administration to “provide all possible support required and needed to stop the abuse of Haitians in the Dominican Republic.”
Originally published at Commondreams.org.