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Re: Building A Third World Shithole

By: killthecat in FFFT3 | Recommend this post (0)
Sat, 27 Sep 14 2:11 AM | 89 view(s)
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Msg. 02736 of 65535
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WASHINGTON — Liberian immigrants living in the United States without a visa won't be sent back to the epicenter of Ebola crisis in West Africa for at least another two years, the Obama administration said Friday.

President Barack Obama signed a memo extending a legal protection called "deferred enforced departure" that continues a protection from deportation that has been in place for more than a decade.

The government first granted Liberians temporary protective status during that country's bloody civil war, which started in 1991 and ended in 2003.

Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., applauded the decision, which he says protects immigrants with long-standing ties to the United States.

Reed has introduced legislation that would grant permanent residence to many Liberians now living in the U.S.




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Building A Third World Shithole
By: killthecat
in FFFT3
Fri, 26 Sep 14 9:31 PM
Msg. 02728 of 65535

WASHINGTON — For nearly three months this summer, the Obama administration carefully avoided answering questions about what happened to tens of thousands of immigrant families caught illegally crossing the Mexican border and released into the United States with instructions to report back to immigration authorities.

But it turns out that tens of thousands of those immigrants did not follow the government's instructions to meet with federal immigration agents within 15 days. Instead, they have vanished into the interior of the U.S.

The Homeland Security Department privately acknowledged that about 70 percent of immigrant families failed to report as ordered. The disclosure came during a confidential meeting at its Washington headquarters with immigration advocates participating in a federal working group on detention and enforcement policies.

On the recording, the government did not specify the total number of families released into the U.S. since October. Since only a few hundred families have already been returned to their home countries and limited U.S. detention facilities can house only about 1,200 family members, the 70 percent figure suggests the government released roughly 41,000 members of immigrant families who subsequently failed to appear at federal immigration offices.

Homeland Security's public affairs office during the same period did not answer roughly a dozen requests for the figures.


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