3,690 Nigerians among immigrants listed for deportation from US
Nearly two million “illegal immigrants” have been identified by the United StatesImmigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for deportation from the country.
The deportations come as President Donald Trump enforces his crackdown on illegal immigrants in the country.
A document obtained by Fox News from ICE’s Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) said there were 1,445,549 non-citizens on ICE’s non-detained docket with final orders of removal as of November 24, 2024.
With 3,690 persons on the list, Nigeria was the country with the second most citizens in Africa, just behind Somalia which had 4,090.
Ghana held the third spot with 3,228 illegal immigrants.
Mexico had the highest number of persons pencilled for deportation with 252,044.
The US government urged countries to accept the return of their nationals.
“Lack of cooperation from the foreign government delays and, in many cases, inhibits the removal process,” the document seen by TheCable reads.
“The U.S. Government requests foreign governments take appropriate steps to confirm the citizenship of noncitizens suspected to be their nationals, which include conducting interviews, issuing travel documents in a timely manner, and accepting the physical return of their nationals by scheduled commercial or charter flights consistent with ICE and/or foreign government removal guidelines.
“Lack of cooperation from countries in accepting the return of their nationals may lead to ICE classifying those countries as uncooperative or at-risk of non-compliance.”
Before winning the presidential election in November, Trump said clamping down on illegal immigrants would be one of his priorities.
The US president has repeatedly described illegal immigrants as aliens who drive up crime rates in the US.
Trump signed a slew of executive orders on the first day of his second coming. Among these was declaring a national emergency at the US-Mexico border and ordering the deployment of troops to enhance border security.
Hours after Trump was sworn in, claims alleging that over three million Nigerians would be deported, went viral on social media.
CableCheck, TheCable’s fact-check arm, found the claims to be false.
(The cable)