from Your News:
Nearly 38,000 Chinese nationals ordered deported remain in the U.S., alongside thousands from other countries, amid criticisms of ICE’s enforcement limitations.
By yourNEWS Media Newsroom
A new report reveals that nearly 38,000 Chinese nationals remain in the United States despite being ordered deported by federal immigration judges. The figures, published by Fox News’s Bill Melugin, highlight significant enforcement challenges facing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
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In addition to the 37,908 Chinese nationals under final deportation orders, other groups include 22,749 Venezuelans, 7,760 Pakistanis, 2,618 Iranians, and 1,708 Afghans who remain in the U.S. despite their asylum claims being rejected. More than 32,000 Haitians, 18,000 Indians, 38,000 Brazilians, 4,000 Mauritanians, and nearly 1,000 Uzbeks are also part of the growing list of individuals not removed after deportation orders.
The majority of the more than 1.4 million illegal aliens with final deportation orders originate from Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras, with nearly one million of these individuals from those four countries. None of the 1.4 million are currently detained by ICE, despite the agency having access to thousands of unused, congressionally funded detention beds.
In documents published by Melugin, ICE officials stated they are “unable to provide a list of case-specific reasons why the agency is unable to remove certain noncitizens on the non-detained docket with final orders.” Critics argue this reflects systemic failures in immigration enforcement policies.
House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Mark Green (R-TN) directly blamed the Biden administration for the enforcement gap. “President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris have hamstrung ICE’s ability to detain and remove those here illegally — even those who have been ordered to be removed by immigration judges,” Green said.
Green also underscored the importance of future policy changes, stating, “It is absolutely critical that Congress fully supports the incoming Trump administration’s efforts to undo this damage and once again enforce our immigration laws and secure our borders.”
As ICE struggles to act on these deportation orders, concerns mount over border security and the effectiveness of immigration laws. The report has fueled calls for greater transparency and accountability in addressing the backlog of deportation cases.