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9th circuit supports DHS on the revocation of the TPS for Honduras, Nicaragua, Nepal

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On Wednesday, the Ninth Circuit Circuit Circuit Court of Appeals on the West Coast presented to the Ministry of Internal Security of a victory after a panel of judges decided to allow the DHS to revoke the status of refugee for illegal immigrants from three key countries.

The judges were unanimously taken on the side of the Secretary of Internal Security, Kristi Noem, who had been prosecuted by a group called the National TPS Alliance during the July Revocation of TPs for Hondurian, Nicaragus and Nepalese migrants.

Noem’s chief spokesperson noted that TPS on behalf is supposed to be temporary and has referred to the “unparalleled” immigration aspect of the program.

“This is another enormous legal victory for the Trump administration, the rule of law, the security of the American public. Temporary protected status was always supposed to be: temporary”, “ Deputy Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said.

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“TPS has never been supposed to be a de facto asylum system, but this is how previous administrations used it for decades while allowing hundreds of thousands of foreigners in the country without appropriate verification. This unanimous decision will help restore the integrity of our immigration system to ensure the security of our homeland and its people.”

Temporary protected status, a formal designation within the 1990 law on immigration and nationality, prescribed that people from countries facing armed conflicts or environmental disasters can be present in the United States for a short period.

These migrants can obtain work and travel authorization and are protected against expulsion as long as the federal government decides.

Tens of thousands of migrants collectively depended on this particular allocation of TPS. The DHS also worked to revoke a distinct designation for Venezuelan migrants.

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Originally, a lower court in July dulled the DHS efforts to cancel TP for Nicaraguans, Nepalese and Honduan migrants for a period of four months, so that the court can fully investigate the case.

The panel of three judges then intervened on Wednesday. There are about 60,000 migrants which are part of this private TPS group, according to CBS News.

Thursday, the Union of American Civil Liberties collected several comments from TPS holders in affected countries, expressing a mixture of indignation and concern during the decision.

“My heart has been broken by the court’s decision. I have lived in the United States for years, and my children have been American citizens and I have never even been in Nepal,” said Sandhya Lama, holder of the Nepalese TPS.

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Kristi-noem-ramp-Flat

Internal security secretary, Kristi Noem, speaks in Quito, in Ecuador, in 2025. (Reuters)

“We are not an” emergency “. We are families, workers and neighbors who have built our lives here.

“I cannot believe that the government wants to tear my legal status and separate myself from my child. I have not gone to Honduras since I was a baby,” added Jhony Silva, from the Honduran and a claimant in the case.

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