Decisions issued by the U.S. Supreme Court yesterday will severely limit protections for people seeking safety in the United States. The first ruling cleared the way for the deportation of hundreds of thousands of Haitian and Syrian nationals who have been living in the United States under Temporary Protected Status (TPS). In a separate decision, the Court issued a ruling limiting the ability of those seeking safety to access the asylum process in the United States.  

“The Supreme Court’s rulings are devastating for people seeking safety,”  said Hans van de Weerd, IRC Vice President of Resettlement, Asylum and Integration“Ending Temporary Protected Status puts vulnerable individuals at risk of deportation to dangerous conditions and deprives American communities of the family members, neighbors, workers, and caregivers they rely on. TPS holders strengthen the U.S. economy, having contributed an estimated $262 billion since 2001, including $20 billion to Social Security—support that millions of aging Americans depend on.

“At the same time, denying access to asylum procedures to those fleeing persecution may force people onto more dangerous routes and into the exploitative hands of smugglers and criminal groups as they search for safety. As conflicts and humanitarian crises deepen around the world, countries should be extending protections, not ending them.”

Editor’s Note:

Haiti, for the second year in a row, is in the top 10 of the IRC’s Emergency Watchlist, an annual report of the world’s worsening humanitarian crises. 

Syria also appears on IRC’s Emergency Watchlist