Despite campaign pledges by US President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris to phase out Trump administration’s immigration policies and stop removing people from the country, several immigrants continue to be deported from the US.

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A court last week ordered the Biden administration not to enforce a 100-day moratorium on deportations, but the ruling did not require the government to schedule them. In recent days, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement has deported immigrants to at least three countries: 15 people to Jamaica on Thursday and 269 people to Guatemala and Honduras on Friday. More deportation flights were scheduled Monday, reports news agency AP.

In one of his first decisions after taking charge, Biden offered a sweeping immigration revamp last week paving way to US citizenship for the estimated 11 million people who are in the United States illegally.

Officials in Honduras confirmed that 131 people were on a deportation flight that landed Friday. Another flight that landed in Guatemala on Friday had 138 people, with an additional 30 people expected to arrive Monday, officials there said, adds AP.

Meanwhile, the White House on Friday reissued a statement saying “President Biden remains committed to taking immediate action to reform our immigration system to ensure it’s upholding American values while keeping our communities safe.”

Now all eyes are on Biden, who is expected to issue a series of immigration-related executive orders Tuesday amid the expected confirmation of Alejandro Mayorkas as Homeland Security secretary.

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Those orders are expected to include the setting up of a task force to reunify families separated during the Trump administration.