
US President Donald Trump. — AFP/File
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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump is asking the US Supreme Court to provide the authority to send refugees to other countries without giving any notice or opportunity to send them.
His administration has said that it needs to accelerate exile and deal with serious criminals, but critics say it takes away human rights rights.
The Justice Department requested that the Justice lifted the nationwide order of Boston -based US District Judge Brian Murphy, under which the opportunity to take legal relief from deportation before sending migrants to the so -called “third countries”, while legal relief continues.
The administration said in its filing that the process of the third country is very important to remove the immigrants who commit crimes, as their original countries are often not ready to withdraw them.
He told the judges, “As a result, criminals are often allowed to stay in the United States for years, during which it is targeted by the Americans who adhere to the law.”
The filing marked the administration’s latest appeal to the country’s highest court as it tries more freedom to enforce Trump’s rigorous line immigration policies and challenge lower court decisions, which have blocked them.
The administration argued that thousands of exiles were likely to be stopped in the Murphy’s decree. It states that the decision “disrupts sensitive diplomatic, foreign policy and national security efforts.”
In February, the Department of Homeland Security was able to determine whether people could be detained instead of providing protection against the removal of their native countries and could be sent to a third country.
Immigrant rights groups have filed a class action case by immigrants who want to stop deportation in third countries to provide rapidly in third countries to provide them with no information or to explain these risks.
In March, the administration issued a guidance stating that if a third country offers credible diplomatic assurances, it will not be persecuted or will not torture immigrants, “people can be deported there without the need for more procedures.”
Without such assurances, if immigrants express their fear of ousting the country, US officials will assess the threat of persecution, possibly referring to the immigration court.
Judge Murphy issued a preliminary order in April, stating that the policy of “removing the third country without providing notes and presenting fear -based claims” violates the protection of a possible process under the fifth amendment of the US Constitution. These reservations usually require the government to provide notice and hearing before taking important steps.
Murphy said that all demands of the Supreme Court, Congress, “wise” and “basic politeness” demand that immigrants be given appropriate action.
On May 16, the first US Circuit Court of Appeal based in Boston refused to stop the Murphy’s decision.
The administration has maintained that its policy meets the standard of appropriate action and claims that the judge’s order weakens the president’s “broader authority” on immigration.
As the previous legal battles on Trump’s clean executive actions, the matter raised further concerns about whether the administration was rejecting judicial orders.
On May 21, Murphy ruled that the administration violated its order by trying to deport migrants to South Sudan.
According to the administration, migrants, now placed at a military base in Joboti, have committed “abusive crimes” in the United States, including murder, fire and armed robbery, according to the administration.
The Department of Justice said, “As a result, the United States has been put for an unprecedented election of holding these foreigners for additional action on a military facility on foreign soil – where their imprisonment has severely damaged US foreign policy every day – or bring these convicted criminals back.”
Murphy also ordered that non -citizens be given at least 10 days to raise claims that they were afraid of their safety.
In a separate move, Murphy amended its order to prevent the department from preventing its decision by moving the refugees to other agencies for deportation. This came when the administration claimed that the US Department of Defense was not bound by the court order.
Following the argument, the government has confessed that the Defense Department has flown four Venezuela at the US Navy base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuban after the original decision of Murphy.
Murphy issued a warning that such an abolition would “clearly violate” its decision, after Reuters reported that a group of refugees could go to Libya for the first time.