Thousands of people who fled Haiti could be forced back to a country dealing with vast gang violence and political turmoil if a judge clears the runway for the Trump administration to end a Biden-era immigration program.
Kevinson Jean, 28, said receiving a letter from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services informing him that he needed to self-deport was terrifying. “I didn’t know what to do. It felt like a nightmare,” he said.
In 2023, the Jeans were granted entry under Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, Venezuela (CHNV) Humanitarian Sponsorship Program, which provided tempor legal status for more than 500,000 people to stay in the U.S. An executive order from President Donald Trump revoking the program was to go into effect April 24, with the administration describing the program as a “broad abuse” of the immigration parole system. A judge temporarily blocked Trump’s order earlier this month. The Trump administration appealed the ruling, and the First Circuit court could rule on the program’s status imminently.
The Jeans’ home country, however, is in the middle of a security and humanitarian crisis. Gangs now control most of Port-au-Prince and violence displaced more than 60,000 people in Febru alone, according to the United Nations.
Trump told NBC News on April 21, that if the Jeans came to the U.S. “legally, then they’re going to be in good shape” to remain. A statement to NBC News from the Department of Homeland Security described the CHNV program as “an unlawful scheme.”
The couple’s journey to the U.S. began in 2019 when Jean befriended Kimberly Snelgrooes, the founder of the nonprofit Christian ministry Hills of His Grace, during a short-term mission trip to Haiti. He began working for the organization, overseeing ministry activities, handling funds and supporting community outreach and humanitarian aid efforts.
The job, though, put a target on his back. Jean said he was held at gunpoint in Port-au-Prince by people demanding cash he had collected for Hills of His Grace’s operations in 2021.
Overall, Jean described the security situation in Haiti as chaotic, citing incidents of gang violence and armed robberies, leaving bodies in the streets. Drone strikes intended to target gangs sometimes hit civilians.