The administration is also postponing a decision until next July on how to deal with a similar programme for 86,000 residents from Honduras.
Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Elaine Duke said yesterday that the programme, known as Temporary Protected Status, is no longer necessary for Nicaraguans in the US Duke said temporary residents living under that permit would be allowed 12 months to allow for an orderly transition for their return and for their Central American homeland.
The TPS programme currently covers 435,000 people from 9 countries ravaged by natural disasters or war and who came to the US, legally or otherwise, during the period their countries were covered by the presidential decree.
While the status was meant to be temporary, it was repeatedly renewed by the Bush and Obama administrations over concerns that the countries could not cope with the repatriation of so many people former residents.
Immigrants from Honduras and Nicaragua have been able to renew their temporary permits every 18 months since 1999, when both countries were given TPS status by the Clinton administration due to destruction from Hurricane Mitch a year earlier.
The Congressional Research Service said this month that only 57,000 people from Honduras and 2,550 from Nicaragua were expected to renew their TPS status.
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