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Africa’s Christian Crisis: How 2025’s deadly attacks finally drew global attention after Trump’s intervention

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JOHANNESBURG: Millions of Christians in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), spending Christmas under the reported threat of persecution, kidnapping, sexual violence and in some cases, death from Islamist militants, have seen Friday’s U.S. strikes on Islamic State militants in Nigeria as a real sign that President Trump is serious in his efforts to stop the killing of Africa’s Christians.
Over 16 million Christians are estimated to have been displaced and ripped from their homes across the region. The alleged release of 130 kidnapped schoolchildren in Nigeria this week has done little to reduce fears, as many on the continent try to worship at Christmas.
But this year, Fox News Digital has highlighted the catastrophe from Africa on multiple occasions. The situation led to senior members of Congress, including Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas., Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., and ultimately, President Donald Trump’s threats and now actions have shone strong light on the violence.
LAWMAKERS SOUND ALARM ON ‘DEADLIEST PLACE ON EARTH TO BE A CHRISTIAN’ AS NIGERIA VIOLENCE ESCALATES
In Africa this Christmas, so far there’s reportedly little sign of improvement. «The militant Islamist onslaught across SSA is a catastrophe of global proportions unfolding before us,» Henrietta Blyth, CEO of Open Doors UK & Ireland, told Fox News Digital this week.
Open Doors is a global Christian charity supporting Christians persecuted for their faith.
Blyth continued, «the last year has seen a non-stop stream of reports from sub-Saharan Africa. (including) reports of militant Islamist groups brutally attacking, among others, defenseless Christian communities.»
«At Open Doors, we have been sounding the alarm through our Arise Africa campaign. We’ve prayed repeatedly that the campaign of terror will reach public awareness.»
Referring to Nigeria and the thousands of Christians reported to have been killed there each year and the speeches, articles and posts against the violence, Open Doors’ Blyth states, «There is no sign that this has abated in 2025».
Members of St Leo Catholic Church hold a procession to mark Palm Sunday in Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria, on April 13, 2025. (Adekunle Ajayi/Getty Images)
«The lack of global outrage and action on this issue is a moral disgrace,» South Africa’s Chief Rabbi, Dr. Warren Goldstein, told Fox News Digital. He added, «It seems as if black lives do not matter if they are murdered by Islamists in Africa. The persecution of Christians in Africa needs to be seen in its global context. It is part of a multi-continental jihadi war on the ‘infidels’ — Jews and Christians — and on Western values.»
He continued «it is a world war, with Israel at the epicenter of the fire of the jihadi forces of Iran, Hamas, Hezbollah and others. The Islamist war on Christians in Africa is another front of this world war that stretches from Sudan in the north to Mozambique in the South.»
TRUMP ADMIN TARGETS ANTI-CHRISTIAN VIOLENCE WITH NEW VISA CRACKDOWN POLICY FOLLOWING NIGERIA ATTACKS
Fox News Digital has highlighted where persecution has hit hardest in Africa in 2025:
NIGERIA
According to Open Doors, the continent’s most populous nation saw the worst persecution in Africa in 2025, with ‘non-stop stories of deadly attacks and kidnappings’ across Nigeria’s north and Middle Belt — a litany of villages torched, citizens raped, abducted, shot and beheaded.
Pope Leo XIV spoke out this year against killings attributed to Muslim Fulani tribesmen in Nigeria’s Benue State in June, saying «Some 200 people were murdered, with extraordinary cruelty».

Christians hold signs as they march on the streets of Abuja during a prayer and penance for peace and security in Nigeria in Abuja on March 1, 2020. – The Catholic Bishops of Nigeria gathered faithfuls as well as other Christians and other people to pray for security and to denounce the barbaric killings of Christians by the Boko Haram insurgents and the incessant cases of kidnapping for ransom in Nigeria. (Photo by KOLA SULAIMON/AFP via Getty Images)
Bishop Wilfred Anagbe’s Makurdi Diocese in north-central Nigeria is almost exclusively Christian. But the constant and escalating attacks by Islamist Fulani militants led him to testify at a congressional hearing in Washington in March. Back in Nigeria, he was threatened, and some 20 of his parishioners killed.
THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO (DRC)

A screen shot shows villagers inspecting the damage left by jihadi terrorists who killed 49 Christians in DR Congo in late July. (Open Doors)
The war-torn country is 95% Christian, yet the faithful are being targeted by jihadists. In February, terrorists linked to Islamic State from the so-called ADF group, who want the eastern part of the country to become a Muslim caliphate, rounded up 70 Christians and reportedly beheaded them — in a church. In September, at least 89 Christians were reportedly slaughtered by jihadists at a funeral and in surrounding fields.
SUDAN
Sudan’s estimated 2 million Christians make up an estimated 4% of the country’s population,
Like the rest of Sudan’s people, they face chronic food shortages and the horror of a yearslong war. But Christians are also allegedly singled out for discrimination and persecution by both sides in the conflict.

The Evangelical church in Omdurman after being bombed even though it was not in a combat zone or used by any warring forces. (Open Doors)
A senior Sudanese church leader told Fox News Digital that in the Darfur city of El Fasher, that «now Christians are eating animal feed and grass. No wheat, no rice, nothing can get in.»
CAMEROON
A civil conflict and weak governance have allowed armed militants to step into the vacuum of law and order, Open Doors reported. In the far north, Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province regularly swoop into villages in overnight raids, killing, abducting and destroying. Thousands of people have fled their homes for displacement camps.
Ali, a villager, said «It never ends. I want it to end, but it doesn’t. We must sleep in the mountains for safety.»
MOZAMBIQUE
Situated in the southwest of the continent, Mozambique has a Christian population of 55%. Islamic State Mozambique is causing havoc in the far north, targeting Christian communities, burning their churches and destroying homes. The killings have multiplied this year, and thousands more are fleeing their homes, joining more than 1.3 million who have already been displaced.

Christian villages targeted in Mozambique (Middle East Media Research Institute)
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In one mass attack on the village of Napala in October, Open Doors reported militants killed 20 Christians and displaced some 2,000. A local pastor described how four elderly sisters were tied up and burned to death inside a house.
On the airstrikes in Nigeria, Open Doors’ Henrietta Blyth told Fox News Digital, «a military operation like this is not going to provide any sort of quick fix for decades of violence. The Nigerian government must pursue lasting solutions that ensure peace, protection of civilians and religious freedom for everyone.»
Chief Rabbi Goldstein concluded, «The West can only win this war if it can find the moral clarity to call it by its name and see all the theaters of war as part of the same fight.»
christianity religion,africa,persecutions,human rights,donald trump
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SCOTUS slated to weigh future birthright citizenship protections for millions — here’s what’s at stake

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The Supreme Court on Wednesday will weigh the legality of President Donald Trump’s executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship in the U.S. — a landmark court fight that could profoundly impact the lives of millions of Americans and lawful U.S. residents.
At issue in the case, Trump v. Barbara, is an executive order Trump signed on his first day back in office. The order in question seeks to end automatic citizenship — or «birthright citizenship» — for nearly all persons born in the U.S. to undocumented parents, or to parents with temporary non-immigrant visas in the U.S.
The stakes in the case are high, putting on a collision course more than a century of executive branch action, Supreme Court precedent, and the text of the Constitution itself — or, more specifically, the Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment.
FEDERAL JUDGE BLOCKS TRUMP’S BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP BAN FOR ALL INFANTS, TESTING LOWER COURT POWERS
President Donald Trump holds up an executive order after signing it during an indoor inauguration parade at Capital One Arena on Jan. 20, 2025 in Washington, D.C. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
Trump administration officials view the order, and the high court’s consideration of the case, as a key component of his hard-line immigration agenda — an issue that has become a defining feature of his second White House term.
Opponents argue the effort is unconstitutional and unprecedented, and could impact an estimated 150,000 children born in the U.S. annually to non-citizens.
A ruling in Trump’s favor would represent a seismic shift for immigration policy in the U.S., and would upend long-held notions of citizenship that Trump and his allies argue are misguided. It would also yield immediate, operational consequences for infants born in the U.S., putting the impetus on Congress and the Trump administration to immediately act to clarify their status.
Here’s what to expect ahead of today’s oral arguments:
What’s at stake?
Justices will weigh Trump’s executive order 14160, or «Protecting the Meaning and Value of American Citizenship.» The order directs all U.S. government agencies to refuse to issue citizenship documents to children born in the U.S. to illegal immigrants, or children born to parents who are in the U.S. legally but with temporary, non-immigrant visas.
The order would apply retroactively to all newborns born in the U.S. after Feb. 19, 2025.
Trump’s executive order prompted a flurry of lawsuits in the days after its signing. Critics argued that, among other things, the order violated the Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment, which grants citizenship to «all persons born … in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States.»
Lawyers for the Trump administration, meanwhile, centered their case on the «subject to jurisdiction thereof» phrase, which they argue was intended at the time of its passage to narrowly «grant citizenship to newly freed slaves and their children» after the Civil War, and has been misinterpreted in the many years since.
U.S. Solicitor General D. Sauer urged the high court to take up the case last October, arguing that a pair of lower court rulings were overly broad and relied on the «mistaken view» that «birth on U.S. territory confers citizenship on anyone subject to the regulatory reach of U.S. law became pervasive, with destructive consequences.»
«Those decisions confer, without lawful justification, the privilege of American citizenship on hundreds of thousands of unqualified people,» he said.
TRUMP TO BEGIN ENFORCING BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP ORDER AS EARLY AS THIS MONTH, DOJ SAYS

(Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and other justices on the high court are seen during President Donald Trump’s 2026 State of the Union address. (Win McNamee/Getty Images))
He also argued that the lower court rulings overstepped, and «invalidated a policy of prime importance to the president and his administration in a manner that undermines our border security.»
Justices on the high court will have no shortage of strings to pull on in considering the executive order, or questioning lawyers during oral arguments.
What’s changed?
The Supreme Court will use Wednesday’s arguments to weigh — to varying degrees — the text of the 14th Amendment, legal precedent, and text of the 1952 Immigration and Nationality Act, among other issues cited by Sauer, the ACLU, and authors of the dozens of amicus briefs filed to the court since it agreed to review the case last fall.
Legal experts told Fox News Digital that they expect Sauer could be in for an uphill battle in convincing a five-justice majority to unwind more than 125 years of precedent and text at issue in the case.
Despite their consensus, however, the court’s conservative bloc will still face thorny issues in reconciling more than a century of court precedent with the narrower reading of the 14th Amendment embraced by the Trump administration.
Justices are likely to focus closely on precedent in the Supreme Court case, United States v. Wong Kim Ark — a 1898 ruling in which the Supreme Court ruled that the son of two Chinese immigrants born in the U.S. was indeed a U.S. citizen.
The case is widely considered to be the modern precedent for birthright citizenship, including related cases heard by the high court in the decades since.
Others cited the text of the 1952 Immigration and Nationality Act statute passed by Congress, which essentially mirrors the text of the 14th Amendment in conferring legal status to persons born in the U.S., as yet another argument that could tip the scales in the migrants’ favor.
«I can think of at least five reasons off the top of my head why the Supreme Court should say that the citizenship clause means today what it has always meant,» Amanda Frost, a professor at the University of Virginia School of Law who specializes in immigration and citizenship issues, told Fox News Digital.
SUPREME COURT SIGNALS IT MAY LIMIT KEY VOTING RIGHTS ACT RULE

(Protesters gather outside the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., in May 2025.)
«There is text. There is original public understanding, which certainly includes Wong Kim Ark, but also five or six Supreme Court cases after that,» Frost said.
«There is executive branch practice for the last century,» she added, «which is relevant as well when you’re interpreting the Constitution, and weighing [the question of], ‘What is the longstanding understanding of a constitutional provision by every other actor?’»
«I don’t see how they could easily count to five,» Akhil Amar, a professor at Yale Law School, told Fox News Digital in an interview, speaking of the majority votes needed.
«Even if I lose on one issue, I win on [many others],» Amar said, before ticking through a list of reasons why the Supreme Court, in his view, might swing in favor of the migrant class in question, and ACLU legal director Cecillia Wang, who is arguing the case Wednesday on behalf of the migrants.
Others agreed, albeit with a bit more reservation.
«I don’t think history supports the Trump administration’s view,» John Yoo, a law professor at the University of California Berkeley and former lawyer during the Bush administration, told Fox News Digital on the strength of the administration’s case.
JUDGES V TRUMP: HERE ARE THE KEY COURT BATTLES HALTING THE WHITE HOUSE AGENDA

A woman under a purple umbrella walks past the Supreme Court. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
Stateless newborns, enforcement issues
Another question will be one of enforcement. Trump’s executive order does not codify the legal status that should be conferred to children who are born in the U.S. to holders of temporary, long-term visas — including student visas and H1B visas, legal experts told Fox News Digital.
Frost, the University of Virginia Law professor, noted that Congress has not provided a pathway to legal status for the class of children who would be born in the U.S. and not granted citizenship. This means that the government would essentially need to act at lightning speed to confer some sort of status — be it temporary or longer-term — to newborns, should the justices side with Trump.
«The parents may have applied for a green card,» Frost said of newborns born to illegal immigrants, should the court allow Trump’s order to take force. «They might get the green card the next day.»
«It would not matter,» she said. «The child would not be a citizen.»

U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks alongside President Donald Trump at a White House press briefing in this 2025 photo. Bondi’s remarks have at times landed her in hot water and diverged from the administration’s own messaging. (Getty Images)
Yoo, Amar, and others cited similar concerns voiced by justices briefly during oral arguments in another birthright citizenship case, Trump v. CASA, last year. The administration asked the court to review the case not on the merits of the order, but as a means of challenging so-called «universal,» or nationwide injunctions issued by federal court judges.
Despite the focus on the lower court powers, some justices still used their time to question Sauer about the birthright citizenship order and its implementation.
Justice Brett Kavanaugh, for his part, pressed Sauer for details on what documentation newborns might need at birth should Trump’s executive order take force.
«On the day after it goes into effect — it’s just a very practical question of how it’s going to work,» Kavanaugh noted, before asking Sauer: «What do hospitals do with a newborn? What do states do with a newborn?» he asked, in order to determine their citizenship on a birth certificate.
«I don’t think they do anything different,» Sauer said in response. «What the executive order says in Section Two is that federal officials do not accept documents that have the wrong designation of citizenship from people who are subject to the executive order.»
«How are they going to know that?» Kavanaugh pressed, shaking his head.
The government’s position «makes no sense whatsoever,» Justice Sonia Sotomayor said at the time, before noting that it appeared to violate «four Supreme Court precedents,» and risked leaving some children stateless.

The Supreme Court building is seen in Washington, D.C. (AP/Jon Elswick)
Who to watch
While it’s difficult to speculate how justices on the high court might position themselves in considering a case, there are some conservative justices that have signaled early skepticism about the Trump administration’s arguments. Their votes could prove to be decisive, experts said.
«In terms of oral arguments, I think what you’re going to see is a lot of attention paid to how Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kavanaugh view the issue in particular,» Yoo said. «I think it will be up to them» to determine the majority ruling, he said.
Roberts, in particular, often relies heavily on Supreme Court precedent, Yoo noted, and has been wary of overturning decisions made under previous courts — pointing to the «sort of anguished dissent» he authored in Roe v. Wade.
«I think that’s really the question: whether there’s going to be enough historical evidence to change Robert’s mind about how to treat precedent,» he said, noting the chief justice tends to view questions of institutional importance and consistency as top-of-mind.
When it comes to birthright citizenship, Yoo said, there is a much longer history and court precedent that is older and «more well-followed» than Roe ever was, he noted, which could swing the conservatives in the ACLU’s favor.
«We never know why the Supreme Court decides to hear a case,» Amar told Fox News Digital. «But I’m hoping that they heard the case because America deserves an answer.»
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A decision from the high court is expected by late June.
donald trump, supreme court, politics, federal courts, national security, immigration, congress
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Ser hipocondríaco en la era de Internet: el libro que analiza desde una perspectiva tanto médica como literaria una condición considerada como real

La inquietud persistente en torno a la salud y el incesante escrutinio de los síntomas han cobrado un protagonismo renovado con la publicación de Hipocondría (Alpha Decay), el libro de Will Rees, cuya aparición coincide con un auge de la ansiedad médica amplificada por el acceso a información digital. El libro no solo propone una revisión personal, sino que recorre el trayecto histórico, filosófico y cultural de un trastorno tantas veces relegado a la incomprensión.
En los últimos años, la hipocondría ha sido reconocida por la investigación médica como una condición tan real como la depresión o el trastorno de estrés postraumático. Este diagnóstico implica que no se trata de un fallo de carácter (como hasta el momento se había hecho creer al paciente), sino de una afección legítima que afecta el modo en que las personas perciben y gestionan la incertidumbre respecto a su propio cuerpo.
De hecho, la Asociación Estadounidense de Psiquiatría ha determinado que tres cuartas partes de los identificados como hipocondríacos presentan un trastorno de síntomas somáticos, mientras que el resto padece trastorno de ansiedad por enfermedad. El auge de herramientas de ‘autodiagnóstico’ online ha introducido el término “cibercondría”, reflejando una nueva modalidad donde la búsqueda de información multiplica la ansiedad en lugar de apaciguarla.
Una experiencia en primera persona
Will Rees, tanto editor como académico británico, describe en primera persona su recorrido a través de la hipocondría, iniciándose en 2010 con un dolor de cabeza crónico. La negativa de Rees a paliar el síntoma recurriendo a analgésicos actúa como punto de partida de una introspección que adopta tintes kafkianos: antes que silenciar la alarma, decide “comprender el dolor”, abordando un periplo de observación minuciosa y creciente acumulación de síntomas percibidos. Olvidos cotidianos, tics, cambios en el gusto del café, e incluso una secuencia de hipo entre una y tres veces al día, configuran ese estado de vigilancia perpetua. Ante una búsqueda reveladora en internet (“¿puede el cáncer cerebral causar hipo?”), Rees se topa con una inquietante afirmación: sí, si la enfermedad está avanzada. A pesar de repetidas consultas médicas y de la falta de hallazgos patológicos, la duda persiste y se expande junto con nuevos indicios.

La comunidad médica ha establecido que la hipocondría no responde a una única definición ni a criterios infalibles, lo cual arroja una sombra de incertidumbre tanto sobre profesionales como pacientes. La mayor parte de los afectados se identifican con la sintomatología somática, mientras otros viven con una inquietud recurrente sin signos físicos manifiestos.
Entender qué es la hipocondría
El término incluso desapareció en 2013 del manual diagnóstico D.S.M.-5, lo que evidencia su carácter ambiguo y evanescente en la tradición clínica. La ‘cibercondría’, por su parte, ha extendido la posibilidad de autoexamen y diagnóstico erróneo a gran escala, con numerosos portales prometiendo identificar los “cinco signos para reconocer la cibercondría” o listados de advertencias que, lejos de tranquilizar, intensifican la preocupación.
El texto de Rees ahonda precisamente en este terreno movedizo: “La hipocondría es un diagnóstico que pone en cuestión cuán seguros podemos estar jamás de cualquier diagnóstico”, escribe el autor, desplazando el interés desde las etiquetas hacia la incertidumbre inherente a cualquier juicio médico. La obra se convierte, así, en una indagación sobre los límites del conocimiento y la imposibilidad de alcanzar una certidumbre absoluta respecto a la salud personal.
A lo largo del libro, Rees confronta la tradición literaria y filosófica en torno a la enfermedad, remitiéndose a autores como Virginia Woolf, Kafka, Immanuel Kant o Samuel Johnson, todos ellos sensibles al sufrimiento físico y a la dificultad de traducirlo al lenguaje.

Woolf, en su ensayo Sobre la enfermedad, subraya: “El inglés, capaz de expresar los pensamientos de Hamlet, carece de palabras para describir el escalofrío y el dolor de cabeza… Quien trata de explicar un dolor a un médico ve cómo el idioma se le agota.” La propia estructura del libro refleja esos desdoblamientos temporales y la superposición de relatos personales y ajenos, incluidas referencias puntuales a ensayos de otros autores y a episodios recientes del propio Rees en los que la sospecha de enfermedad nunca se resuelve del todo.
Cinco años para “entender” su enfermedad
El testimonio de Rees articula una experiencia que se extiende hasta su juventud, marcando casi una década de vaivén entre el alivio transitorio y la reaparición del temor. La lectura sobre síntomas y enfermedades, comparada por algunos médicos victorianos con la causa misma de la hipocondría, ahora encuentra eco en la economía digital de la salud, donde buscadores y plataformas especializadas han multiplicado las oportunidades para la inquietud. Rees llega a someterse a pruebas oftalmológicas, resonancias y variados estudios, recibiendo diagnósticos que a menudo solo refuerzan su inseguridad. Un episodio significativo se produce cuando, tras la publicación de un ensayo sobre el tema, un desconocido se le acerca para advertirle que debe realizarse otra revisión, reabriendo la espiral del cuestionamiento y la incertidumbre.
La cantante actúa por primera vez en Madrid con la gira de ‘LUX’ ante un público que clama por ella. / Grabación de pantalla de @rafacasah
La reflexión final de Rees (que, llegada la treintena, ha logrado dejar de pensar de forma compulsiva en su salud) no implica la consecución de una certeza, sino una suerte de aprendizaje en torno a la aceptación de la duda. En palabras del propio autor, escritas en su libro: “Mi libro cubre cinco años de mi vida, que comenzaron cuando creía tener un tumor cerebral y concluyeron, ya en la veintena, al convencerme de que tenía un linfoma. Estos dos momentos, estas dos crisis en que la cuestión de la salud se cernía sobre mi rutina diaria, enmarcan Hipocondría, que también analiza la historia de esta dolencia y a quienes intentaron comprenderla”.
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Trump admin unlawfully terminated legal status of migrants who used Biden-era app, judge rules

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A federal judge ruled on Tuesday that the Trump administration unlawfully terminated the legal status of thousands of migrants who had been allowed to temporarily live in the U.S. after using an app expanded by the Biden administration to schedule appointments with immigration officials.
U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs in Boston ordered the administration to reverse its move last year to revoke the legal status of migrants who used the CBP One app.
The app was used under former President Joe Biden starting in 2023 to address the crisis at the border by allowing some migrants to make appointments to seek asylum, with many paroled into the country for up to two years, but President Donald Trump moved to shut down the app when he returned to the White House last year.
Burroughs found that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security acted unlawfully in April of last year when it sent mass emails to many of the roughly 900,000 people who entered the country using the app, informing them that it was «time for you to leave the United States.»
VENEZUELAN MIGRANTS, PROGRESSIVE GROUP SUE TRUMP AFTER NOEM NIXES BIDEN-ERA ‘PROTECTED STATUS’
U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs ordered the Trump administration to reverse its move last year to revoke the legal status of migrants who used the CBP One app. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)
«The regulations do not give the agency unfettered discretion to terminate parole,» Burroughs wrote.
«When Defendants terminated the impacted noncitizens’ parole without observing the process mandated by statute and by their own regulations, they took action that was ‘not in accordance with law,’» the judge added.
The Venezuelan Association of Massachusetts, one of the plaintiffs in the case, celebrated the ruling, saying it «brings long-awaited relief after months of fear and uncertainty.»
Democracy Forward, another group that helped bring the legal challenge, also praised the judge’s decision.
FEDERAL JUDGE UPHOLDS TEMPORARY PROTECTED STATUS FOR HAITIAN IMMIGRANTS

The app was used under former President Joe Biden to address the crisis at the border by allowing some migrants to make an appointment to seek asylum, with many paroled into the country for up to two years. (Sandy Huffaker/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
«Today’s ruling is a clear rejection of an administration that has tried to erase lawful status for hundreds of thousands of people with the click of a button,» the group’s president, Skye Perryman, said in a statement.
«Our clients followed the law: they waited, registered, were inspected, and were granted parole under the law. The Trump-Vance administration’s effort to tear that status away overnight was unlawful and cruel — and today, the court rejected that harmful and destabilizing policy,» the statement added.
A DHS spokesperson said the ruling was an example of «blatant judicial activism» that interfered with Trump’s authority to determine who remains in the country.
«Canceling these paroles is a promise kept to the American people to secure our borders and protect our national security,» the spokesperson said in a statement.

The judge found that DHS acted unlawfully in April of last year when it sent mass emails alerting many of the roughly 900,000 people who entered the country using the app that it was «time for you to leave the United States.» (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)
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The ruling came after a class-action lawsuit filed in August by three individuals from Venezuela, Cuba and Haiti who argued the Trump administration’s effort to remove them from the country represented an abrupt, unlawful move to pull parole status and work authorization from migrants.
The Trump administration had argued that Biden overstepped parole authority by broadly awarding the status instead of granting it on a case-by-case basis.
Burroughs said when DHS sent out termination notices to migrants, it failed to comply with requirements to provide a record showing an official had determined that the purposes of parole had been served.
«Accordingly, the parole terminations exceeded the agency’s statutory authority and contradicted the procedures set forth in its own regulations,» the judge wrote.
Reuters contributed to this report.
immigration, illegal immigrants, donald trump, politics, joe biden, homeland security, judiciary
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