Around 350,000 Venezuelas in the U.S. will lose their Temporary Protected Status, but what is it? And why are they losing it?
Dozens of Venezuelan migrants boarded small boats on an island off the Caribbean coast of Panama on Monday, setting off towards Colombia by sea as part of a reverse migration of families who have given up trying to reach the United States.
For nearly 350,000 Venezuelans benefiting from Temporary Protected Status, a federal program the Trump administration has officially ended, the clock is running out. The federal government’s decision to terminate deportation protections under the 2023 TPS designation has set a high-stakes deadline: April 2.
The Tren de Aragua Invasion," which explores the origins and sinister state of the violent migrant gang on Fox Nation.
Grenell convinced Venezuela’s strong man, Nicolas Maduro, to release six American hostages. He also persuaded Maduro to embrace the return of illegal Venezuelan migrants from the U.S. The first return flights started last week, and Grenell was there to see the migrants off.
Advocacy groups and Venezuelan immigrants have filed suit in federal courts over terminated removal protections for Venezuelans in the United States.
The Latino Newsletter on MSN5dOpinion
Opinion: Sanctions Are Not the Direct Cause of Venezuela’s Migrant CrisisBut that, the idea that sanctions are the direct cause of Venezuela’s migrant crisis is just not accurate. In 2017, the first sanctions by the U.S. toward the Venezuelan governm
Here is a report by the Washington-based Center for Economic and Policy Research Center, which looks at the thousands of deaths that occurred in Venezuela during this period due to US sanctions: Report Finds US Sanctions on Venezuela Are Responsible for Tens of Thousands of Deaths
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