Is This the Cringiest Kamala Harris Interview?
OnlyFans Star Claims Biden Administration Paid Her to Spread Propaganda
What Triggered Nancy Pelosi's Meltdown on MSNBC Yesterday
It's Time to Brutally Put Down These Pro-Hamas Punks on College Campuses
The Left Wants to Play Stupid Games
Behind The Scenes: FBI Surveillance And The Truth About Protest Monitoring
The Media Ignored the Anti-Biden Protest Votes Among Pennsylvania Democrats
Here's How Members of Congress Are Responding to Reports ICC May Issue Arrest...
Turkey Cannot Be a Mediator in the Gaza War
Joe Biden Says There Are Very Fine People on Both Sides of the...
Oversight Chair James Comer Is Right to Challenge Biden’s Bureaucratic Hiring Spree
Left-Wing Activists Are Controlling the Biden Administration
I've Never Needed to Perform an Abortion to Save a Woman's Life
Joe Biden’s Plot to Halt Innovation
Another Ivy League Says They're Suspending Pro-Hamas Students
Tipsheet

Why More Than 1,000 Illegal Immigrants From Africa Gathered Outside NY City Hall

AP Photo/John Minchillo

More than 1,500 illegal immigrants from Africa assembled outside New York City Hall on Tuesday as a hearing took place on the “racial inequities” in the city’s shelter system.

Advertisement

According to reporting from the New York Post, the illegal immigrants were mostly from Guinea and were led there by an unidentified activist group. The illegal immigrants said they had been told by people in the community they would get work visas or green cards if they came.

“They told me that they would help me to get a work permit and a green card if I came here today,” Amadou Sara Bah, 44, who got to the US in November from Guinea, explained, adding he wouldn’t have come to City Hall just for the hearing.

Bah said he was stressed about waiting for a work permit, which he applied for in March, noting it could take about five months to come through and he does not have a lawyer to speed up the process.

 By 12:30 p.m., he and his friends were still sitting on a bench near City Hall, but no one had offered to help them.

“There are many people here and we don’t know how to get the help they told us would be here,” he told The Post. “I came here for a green card. I’m looking for help.” [...]

“They told us to be here at this time on this date and they would give us more information,” he said, noting he was told to contact someone via WhatsApp for help but does not have access to a phone. (New York Post)

Advertisement

According to a press release, the hearing sought to “understand how the [Adams] Administration is addressing language access barriers, cultural competency challenges, health needs, and other roadblocks” they face. 


Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement