
A United States federal judge has ruled against the Trump administration’s decision to end temporary protected status TPS for over 5,000 Ethiopians in the US. US District Judge Brian Murphy in Boston stated that the decision to terminate TPS, enacted by the US Department of Homeland Security in December 2025, disregarded statutory procedures and ongoing conflicts. This ruling follows a lawsuit filed by three Ethiopian nationals and African Communities Together, an organization advocating for African immigrants' rights in the US. Judge Murphy concluded that the Department of Homeland Security provided a “pretextual” rationale for ending protections for people from Ethiopia, where “armed conflict and natural disasters continue to create dangerous conditions.” This aligns with a US embassy travel advisory for Addis Ababa, urging reconsideration of travel to Ethiopia due to unrest, crime, and other dangers. Judge Murphy emphasized that the President's will does not supersede that of Congress and that presidential whims cannot supplant agencies’ statutory obligations. The TPS program, which began in 1990, has expanded to cover many countries, with approximately 1.3 million individuals from 17 countries granted TPS as of March 31, 2025. Ethiopia is currently one of a dozen countries under TPS. The US Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments later this month regarding the Trump administration's ability to revoke TPS for Haitians and Syrians.
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This summary was AI-generated from a story originally published by The Reporter Ethiopia.