PH Embassy not sure if undocumented Pinoys left US ahead of mass deportation
The Philippine Embassy in Washington has yet to determine if many undocumented Filipinos have already left the United States ahead of the anticipated mass deportation under the Trump administration, an envoy said on Monday.
“We are not sure whether many of those that are undocumented na ating mga kababayan have left,” Philippine Ambassador to the US Jose Manuel Romualdez told Unang Balita in an interview.
Romualdez said the embassy has advised undocumented Filipinos to leave the US as deported individuals will not be allowed to come back.
“Yun nga ang advice namin sa kanila. Kung wala talaga silang legal path, it is better they go na muna para makabalik sila dito at some point in time. Kasi kapag ma-deport ka, talagang hindi ka na makakabalik,” he said.
(That's our advice to them. If they really don't have a legal path, it's better they go already so they can come back here at some point in time. Because once you get deported, you really can't come back.)
According to Romualdez, the US government said those who have criminal records as well as the 1.3 million immigrants who are already processed will be prioritized for deportation.
In November last year, the Department of Migrant Workers (DMW) said it would assist over 300,000 undocumented Filipinos in the US who could possibly be deported.
DMW Secretary Hans Leo Cacdac said that there are an estimated 370,000 undocumented Filipino immigrants in the US.
“The DMW is prepared to assist our OFWs, whether they are documented or undocumented OFWs. Under the directives of our President, a whole-of-government team is here to provide support to possible deportees,” Cacdac said.
During Trump’s first term in the White House from 2017 to 2020, over 3,500 Filipinos were deported with the highest being recorded in 2018 with 503.
In his victory speech, Trump reiterated that he would close borders in the United States and would impose stricter laws against illegal aliens.
“We gonna have to seal up those borders, we are gonna have to let people come into our country. We want people to come back in, but they have to come in legally… We are gonna start by putting America first,” he said.
In a rally in Washington on Sunday, President-elect Donald Trump said he would impose severe limits on immigration on his first day in office which is January 20.
"By the time the sun sets tomorrow, the invasion of our country will have come to a halt," he said to cheers at a "Make America Great Again Victory Rally" at the Capital One Arena, Reuters reported.
Pope Francis on the other hand on Sunday said it would be a disgrace if Trump implements immigration raids.
"It would make the migrants, who have nothing, pay the unpaid bill," Pope Francis said, according to a report by Reuters. "It doesn't work. You don't resolve problems this way."
Data gathered by the GMA Integrated News Research showed that there are 4,640,313 Filipinos in the US as of last year, according to the latest figures by the US Census Bureau.
Further, data from the US Department of Homeland Security stated that Filipinos have the fifth largest unauthorized immigrant population in the US with 350,000 in 2022. —KG, GMA Integrated News