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Submitted by Rickford Burke
President Barack Obama

The Obama administration announced Friday that it will allow an estimated 100,000 to 200,000 Haitians living in the United States illegally to stay and work in the country for 18 months as part of its response to Tuesday’s earthquake, but warned Haitians that leaving the country now “will only bring more hardship to the Haitian people and nation.”

Homeland Security Janet Napolitano said the decision to grant Temporary Protected Status to illegal immigrants from Haiti who were living in the United States as of January 12 was a gesture of compassion and an attempt to ensure that the flow of remittances and economic support to their devastated homeland continue.

“This is a disaster of historic proportions,” Napolitano said in a 5 p.m. conference call, “Providing a temporary refuge for Haitian nationals who are currently in the United States and whose personal safety would be ended by returning to Haiti as part of this administration continue effort to support Haiti’s recovery.”

However, Napolitano coupled that message with a caution to Haitians now seeking refuge outside their country. While she declined to specify the consequences for those caught trying to enter the U.S. illegally, she said, “At this moment of tragedy in Haiti, it is tempting for people suffering in the aftermath of the earthquake to seek refuge elsewhere, but attempting to leave Haiti now will only bring more hardship to the Haitian people and nation.”


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7 responses to “USA Government Extends Temporary Asylum To Illegal Haitian Immigrants”


  1. Will PM Thompson do similar?

    Will he send home those Chinese, especially with so many Barbadians construction workers on the bread-line and replace them with Haitian workers?

    Will he call a cease-fire on deporting Haitians?


  2. The Dominican Republic is placing the military on its border so that Hatian refugees do not overwhelm them and they share the same island, Alex ferguson. Leave Barbados alone. governments have to enforce the law. Pray for Haiti. May God be with them.


  3. This is what I wrote yesterday. Unlike Thompson, I did not have to take a “TOUR” to Haiti to know this:

    +++++++++

    Alex Fergusson // January 15, 2010 at 4:02 PM

    Haiti needs technical assistance and we could best support them by sending technical people to find out what their needs are.

    The place is in ruins!

    The airport is swamped with planes such that planes bringing in teams and serious aid cant even land.

    There are no hotels left standing, no food, no water.

    All that these prime ministers will be doing is, by their presence confusing the situation and placing additional burdens on the country.

    This nation is in ruins and is in no state to be dealing with one visiting head of state, far less two or three.

    It would impose burdens on Haiti to provide protocol, to provide security and such like.

    What Haiti needs now is help, not boy scout visits by Prime Ministers!

    CEDERA is the Caricom body that coordinates regional disaster responses and has done so very well in the past.

    This is not a time for Prime Ministerial photo-ops.

    Send money!
    Send man power!
    Send food and water!
    Send doctors nurses and medicines!

    That is what the rest of the world is doing!

    Not organizing Prime Ministerial visits to clutter up a broken country, to distract the President and so on from important tasks ahead.

    +++++++++++

    Now! Time has proven that I was right and that our wait-and-see Prime Minister only succeeded in getting his picture taken while using some of the same money on fuel that could have been donet to Haiti.

    Exactly why would a wait-and-see Prime Minister decide to TRAVEL-To-SEE, when he could have seen on CNN and BBC World like the rest of us who may even care more?


  4. The Caricom Heads were given a slap in their faces by the U.S. government. Imagine our leaders going to see the damage done to their our member state and the American government refusing them landing rights? Maybe it is good because we have neglected Haiti for too long and in any case, what can our leaders do to bring some stability to Haiti right now. just a lotta long talk?


  5. @alex fergusson
    Reporter at large shsh————-


  6. How come there was no room for the Caricom Team to land but there was some for the U.N. Team?


  7. @ The Scout

    I do not usually agree with you but I do on this occasion.

    Haiti has essentially become the 55th State of America, who is essentially running that country.

    The US government essentially told Thompson, Golding and Skerrit – “EVER SO WELCOME, WAIT FOR A CALL.”

    Go Home and fix your econmy and other problems.

    The US knows that the people of Haiti are not those for whom Thompson would write off $19; give $20 million or change 80 acres of prime agriculture land to construction.

    The US further supports my point that Haiti is no place for photo ops.

    secondly, that if Thompson wants to be helpful, he should implement a humane immigration policy and fix the economy.

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