Donald Trump |
Donald The United States president
Donald Trump’s strict immigration policy is being extended to citizens
of the world’s powerful country whose naturalization cases are going to
be reexamined by a special task force announced in June.
The news about the denaturalization drive was overshadowed by the
deportations and cruelty against immigrants in detention centres
including hundreds of children who have been caged away from their locked up parents.
The Director of the United States Citizenship and Immigration
Services, L. Francis Cissna, told the Associated Press that the new task
force will look for people who “should not have been naturalized in the
first place”.
He added that the organisation is hiring dozens of lawyers and
immigration officers to find U.S. citizens who “should not have been
naturalized”, to revoke their citizenship, and then deport them.
The targets include people who are found to have lied or suspected of
cheating to get their citizenship; those who changed their identities
and reapplied for citizenship after a removal order was issued against
them under a different identity.
“The people who are going to be targeted by this — they know full
well who they are because they were ordered removed under a different
identity and they intentionally lied about it when they applied for
citizenship later on. It may be some time before we get to their case,
but we’ll get to them,” USCIS director Cissna said.
The task force’s new office in Los Angeles is expected to run by next
year. The U.S. government has tackled a number of such cases in the
past decade with the notable one earlier this year when a judge revoked
the citizenship of an Indian-born New Jersey man named Baljinder Singh.
Federal authorities accused him of using an alias to avoid
deportation after his arrival in the United States in 1991. He applied
for asylum using a different name after he was ordered deported the next
year and a month after arriving in the U.S.
He later married an American woman and got a green card before naturalization without mentioning his earlier deportation order.
Since 1990, 305 civil denaturalization cases were files, according to
immigration attorney Matthew Hoppock who believes some immigrants might
have made mistakes on their paperwork and might not have the money to
fight back in court when targeted.
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