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CIUDAD JUAREZ (Reuters) - As U.S. President Joe Biden took the oath of office last Wednesday, Felipe Ortega sat in a van handcuffed and chained at the waist and feet, headed toward Mexico and the end of his 30-year life in the United States.
Mexican national Felipe Ortega, 58, cries whilst meeting with his family after being deported from the U.S. to Mexico, at the Paso del Norte border crossing bridge, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico January 20, 2021. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez
A day earlier, the 58-year-old grandfather of eight U.S. citizens was on his way to work when immigration agents surrounded his car in Midland, Texas, just blocks from his home. They told Ortega he had an outstanding deportation order from 15 years ago.
A 58-year-old grandfather of eight US citizens had an outstanding deportation order from 15 years ago
Reuters
January 27, 2021
Mexican national Felipe Ortega, 59, cries whilst meeting with his family after being deported from the US to Mexico, at the Paso del Norte border crossing bridge, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. PHOTO: REUTERS
CIUDAD JUAREZ:
As US President Joe Biden took the oath of office last Wednesday, Felipe Ortega sat in a van handcuffed and chained at the waist and feet, headed toward Mexico and the end of his 30-year life in the United States.
A day earlier, the 58-year-old grandfather of eight US citizens was on his way to work when immigration agents surrounded his car in Midland, Texas, just blocks from his home. They told Ortega he had an outstanding deportation order from 15 years ago.
President Biden s immigration changes too late for grandfather deported on Inauguration Day
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Last Updated: Jan 27, 2021, 04:46 PM IST
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Synopsis
In one of his first acts of office, Biden rescinded an executive order by former President Donald Trump that had targeted more immigrants living in the country illegally for arrest and deportation, including those with no criminal records like Ortega.
Reuters
Mexican national Felipe Ortega, 59, cries whilst meeting with his family after being deported from the U.S. to Mexico, at the Paso del Norte border crossing bridge, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico
CIUDAD JUAREZ: As U.S. President Joe Biden took the oath of office last Wednesday, Felipe Ortega sat in a van handcuffed and chained at the waist and feet, headed toward Mexico and the end of his 30-year life in the United States.
By Syndicated Content
By Mica Rosenberg, Kristina Cooke and Jose Luis Gonzalez
CIUDAD JUAREZ (Reuters) - As U.S. President Joe Biden took the oath of office last Wednesday, Felipe Ortega sat in a van handcuffed and chained at the waist and feet, headed toward Mexico and the end of his 30-year life in the United States.
A day earlier, the 58-year-old grandfather of eight U.S. citizens was on his way to work when immigration agents surrounded his car in Midland, Texas, just blocks from his home. They told Ortega he had an outstanding deportation order from 15 years ago.
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Outcrop ) is pleased to announce results from a ground geophysical program on its 100% owned Santa Ana project in north Tolima. Outcrop is also commencing a large airborne geophysical survey along a 36 km northeast mineralized trend between the Santa Ana and El Porvenir mines with a flight line width of 10 kilometres.
Highlights
Both vein zones and their larger related alteration zones are inferred from the ground survey.
An airborne magnetics-radiometrics-lidar survey will be used to generate targets within a 36 kilometre by 10 kilometre area. If the results are encouraging, an equal size area will be added mid-year.