Minnesota Somali Community Fears โDisplacement as TPS Faces Termination
MINNEAPOLIS – Minnesota’s large Somali community is expressing deep concern and uncertainty following reports of โคa potentialโฃ termination โof Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for โคSomali migrants, โreportedly due to fraudulent activity within the state. The move threatens the stability of families and raises fears of forced return to Somalia, a country many fled dueโ to ongoing conflict and instability.
Minnesota is home to nearly 80,000 people of Somali descent, according to Minnesota โคCompass data, though estimates suggest fewer than one percent currently hold TPS status. TPS is a designation granted to individualsโ from countries experiencingโข armed conflict, environmental disaster, or other exceptional and โtemporary conditions. Somali immigrants have been eligible โfor TPS since 1991.
the potential termination has sparked accusations of collective punishment and ethnic profiling. Mahdi Warsama, CEO of the โคSomaliโข Parents autism Network,โ stated, “The president doesn’t have the right to impugn the reputation of an entire community, just becauseโฃ a few people fromโ that community committed a fraud. That is the textbook definition of ethnic profiling and guilty by association.”
The uncertainty is already impacting individuals. A minneapolis woman told 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS her 23-year-old niece, who fled Somalia two years ago and now has TPS, โฃ”is โworried” โabout โbeing sent backโ to a country where she fears for her safety.
Jaylani Hussein,with the Council on American-Islamic Relations for Minnesota,highlighted the potential for family separation. “For TPS holders, this is their worst nightmare,” he โsaid. “So,most of theโ families are mixed status. Some are citizens, some on โคtheir way to being citizens, so this โwill definitely be a family separation policy.”
While the Department of homeland Securityโค has not yet formally terminated the program, โฃlegal challenges are โคanticipated.
The White โHouse has not yet responded toโค requests forโค comment. Individuals impacted are โalready seeking legal counsel, and advocates are hoping for โaโ reversal of course. As one Minnesota resident stated, “I wish he’d โchange his mind what he’s saying.Because America is a dreamland, and everybody wants to stay. and we want to stay, the people.”
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