At least, 5,144 Nigerians may be affected in the
initial stage of the ongoing deportation exercises from the United States of
America as President Donald Trump’s crackdown on undocumented immigrants
continues.
The figure includes non-US citizens of Nigeria origin
in the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, ICE, and Enforcement and Removal
Operations, ERO, non-detained docket with final orders of removal from the US
and those already in ICE detention.
Efforts made to reach the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
on the matter, at press time last night was unsuccessful.
But the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM),
said that the Federal Government had already put in place an inter-agency
committee to tackle the matter should there be mass deportation of Nigerians by
Donald Trump’s government.
However, data shared by ICE showed that a total of
1,445,549 non-US citizens from different nationalities are on the non-detained
docket with final orders of removal as at November 2024, with 3,690 being
Nigerians.
Fresh data from ICE also indicated that an additional
1,454 are currently in detention and are billed for deportation to Nigeria.
According to the data, 772 of the 1,454 Nigerians in
ICE custody were arrested and detained for criminal convictions or pending
criminal charges, while the rest were arrested for other immigration
violations, such as visa overstay.
It further showed that 417 were arrested and removed
as at November 2024, while 884 were removed between 2019 and 2024.
The disclosure by ICE comes at a time the new administration of President Trump
is implementing an immigration policy targeted at cleaning q United States of
illegal immigrants.
Nearly 3,000 “criminal aliens” have been arrested in
the first few days of the operation in the wake of the mass deportation.
Though the initial arrest and deportation were
focussed on illegal immigrants with known criminal records, there is a growing
concern that attention would soon shift to include other illegal immigrants,
especially those in the non-detained list with orders for their removal from
the states.
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A “non-detained docket” refers to a list maintained by ICE that includes
individuals they believe are removable non-citizens currently residing in the
United States but are not held in ICE detention.
Essentially, they are people that are not currently in
ICE custody but are still considered targets for potential deportation action.
Usually, ICE, with the power of final order of removal
from an immigration court, will go ahead to deport a person on the non-detained
docket, even though a person may be deported without a court order under the
process of expedited removal.
A final order of removal is usually issued against an
immigrant who has violated immigration laws, has a criminal conviction or
possesses an expired immigration status.
ICE said in the document that it is unable to provide
a list of case-specific reasons it is unable to remove certain non-citizens on
the non-detained docket with final orders.
“There are several reasons ICE is unable to effectuate
removals. Under Title 8 of the U.S. Code, ICE may remove non-citizens from the
United States who are subject to final orders of removal issued by an
immigration judge or other lawful orders, including those processed under
expedited removal who either have not claimed a fear of return or received a
negative credible fear determination affirmed by an immigration judge.
“However, this does not guarantee every person seeking
to remain in the United States will be able to do so.
“Non-citizens may pursue a form of relief or protection from removal, which may
include asylum, withholding of removal, or protection under the Convention
Against Torture. If a non-citizen is granted any form of relief from removal,
ICE is unable to effectuate the removal.
“Additionally, ICE works to remove undocumented
non-citizens from the United States once they are subject to final orders of
removal in a timely manner”, the ICE said.
Meanwhile, the ICE and ERO have also been mandated by
President Trump to ramp-up arrest and removal actions to between 1,200 and
1,500 daily.
Commenting on the removals, ICE Deputy Director and
senior official performing the duties of the director, Patrick J. Lechleitner,
said: “With the public release of this enforcement data, ICE is demonstrating
its commitment to openness and transparency.
‘’We will continue to evaluate and enhance how the
agency communicates measurable data to best inform how our officers and special
agents perform their law enforcement missions in accordance with departmental
and agency priorities.”
Following the directive given to Department of
Justice, DOJ, law enforcement officials in the U.S. Marshals, Drug Enforcement
Administration, DEA, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives,
and the Federal Bureau of Prisons authority to investigate and apprehend
illegal aliens, Acting Department of Homeland Security Secretary, Benjamine
Huffman, said: “Today’s action empowers law enforcement officials at the DOJ to
help identify and apprehend aliens who have illegally come into our country.
“Mobilizing these law enforcement officials will help
fulfill President Trump’s promise to the American people to carry out mass
deportations”.
Contacted yesterday for its reaction, the Nigerians in
Diaspora Commission, NiDCOM, however, said it was not aware of Nigerians in
America being processed for deportation.
The Director of Media and Corporate Affairs of the
commission, Abdurahman Balogun, said though the Ministry of Foreign Affairs was
in charge of such development, being a consular matter, the Federal Government
had already set up an inter-agency committee to handle the matter should
Nigerians be deported from the US.
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