Deportations continue after May 23 but without title 42

Deportations continue after May 23, but without title 42

AfterAfter May 23, deportations in the US will continue

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) as well as the United States Congress did official end of title 42. This gives peace of mind to hundreds of undocumented migrants in the American Union.

This worsened in the early months of 2020, particularly as the Covid-19 pandemic began. Donald Trump, former President of the United States, used this title — from 1944 — to deport thousands of people with a health problem.

In the face of this, thousands of people who want to stay in the American Union can breathe easy for now, but The government will look for other legal ways to return them to their countries of origin if they do not have the official documents.

On the other side of the coin, applause becomes a worry. Some experts on the subject say that far from calming and legally resolving things, this will cause many problems at the border with Mexico. Many people will try to enter the country upon learning of the extinction of this title.

“We call on the administration redouble their efforts to deal with the crisis driving unprecedented levels of migration across our hemisphere. Many of our Cuban, Haitian, Venezuelan, Colombian and Nicaraguan brothers and sisters, along with others in this hemisphere, face direct and immediate threats to their lives,” Senators Robert Menendez and Cory Booker said in a statement.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS, for its English acronym) ensured that before this Title 42 expires on May 23, Deportations citing the global health crisis continue.

But once that is over, the trials will resume within the country’s southern border, but under different arguments set out by US law.

“Once the Title 42 order is no longer in effect (this has been in effect since May 23), DHS will process individuals found at the border under Title 8, which is the standard procedure we use for individuals in deportation proceedings pose,” said DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.