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US Judge orders Trump Administration to admit 12,000 Refugees amid Immigration Policy clash

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Mr Donald Trump

On Monday, a United States judge ordered the administration of President Donald Trump to admit approximately 12,000 refugees into the country, dealing a significant blow to the government’s ongoing efforts to reshape America’s immigration system.

The ruling came as a clarification to an earlier appeals court decision which allowed the Trump administration to pause the refugee admissions process but insisted that individuals already granted refugee status and cleared for travel to the US must be allowed entry.

The Trump administration had previously argued at a court hearing that it should only be required to admit about 160 refugees who were scheduled to travel within two weeks of the executive order issued in January halting the refugee system.

However, US District Judge Jamal Whitehead dismissed this claim, describing the government’s stance as “interpretive jiggerypokery of the highest order.” In his ruling, Whitehead noted, “It requires not just reading between the lines but hallucinating new text that simply is not there.”

Judge Whitehead had initially blocked Trump’s executive order suspending refugee admissions in February, ruling that it likely violated the provisions of the 1980 Refugee Act. But his ruling was overturned by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals a month later.

“Had the Ninth Circuit intended to impose a two-week limitation — one that would reduce the protected group from about 12,000 to 160 people — it would have stated so explicitly,” Whitehead wrote in his decision. “This Court will not entertain the government’s result-oriented rewriting of a judicial order that clearly says what it says.”

The legal action was initiated by several humanitarian groups, including the Jewish refugee non-profit HIAS, the Christian organization Church World Service, Lutheran Community Services Northwest, and a number of individuals. The groups argued that several refugees had been cleared to travel, having sold off their belongings in preparation, only to be left stranded and uncertain following Trump’s executive order.

Refugee resettlement has long been one of the few legitimate pathways to eventual US citizenship and was notably expanded under former President Joe Biden’s administration to include individuals displaced by climate change.

During his presidency, Trump’s campaign and policies were frequently marked by harsh rhetoric on immigration. His administration also carried out a series of deportations, including widely publicized military flights returning handcuffed migrants to several Latin American countries.

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