US President Joe Biden speaks about foreign policy at the State Department in Washington, Feb. 4, 2021. (AFP)
What President Biden is doing to bring more refugees into the US
US President Joe Biden is proposing to raise refugee admissions this year to 62,500 from the record-low 15,000 set by his predecessor Donald Trump.
US State Department officials are expected to meet this week with key lawmakers in a formal consultation that is part of the process to set refugee levels, according to three people briefed on the meetings.
Here is Biden’s plan, based on a proposal submitted to Congress and people familiar with it.
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Regional allotments
Biden will create spots for 22,000 refugees from Africa, 13,000 from South Asia, 6,000 from East Asia, 5,000 from Latin America and the Caribbean, and 4,000 from Europe and Central Asia, according to the plan. Another 12,500 unallocated spots will also be available.
In Biden’s proposal to Congress, he argues the expansion this year is needed in part to resettle refugees from more than a dozen nations whose humanitarian situation is worsening. The president’s stance contrasts sharply with Trump’s depiction of refugees as a security threat and economic burden.
Biden said on Feb. 4 that he intends to raise annual refugee admissions to 125,000 in the coming fiscal year, which begins on October 1, 2021.
Current refugee admissions slowed to a crawl amid Trump’s restrictions and the coronavirus pandemic.
From Oct. 1 to Feb. 5, the United States resettled only 1,501 refugees, according to State Department data shared with refugee groups.
International passengers exit the transit area after clearing immigration and customs on arrival at Dulles International Airport, Virginia, US, on September 24, 2017. (Reuters)
Refugee populations
Biden’s plan specifically mentions the plight of refugees from more than a dozen countries, including Syria, where it says “regime forces have forcibly displaced, raped, starved, and massacred civilians.”
Nearly 12,600 Syrian refugees were allowed into the United States during fiscal year 2016, the last full year under former President Barack Obama. Syrian admissions plunged under Trump to roughly 500 in fiscal year 2020.
Other refugee populations mentioned in Biden’s proposal are those in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar, Uighur Muslims from China and residents of Hong Kong.
In the Western Hemisphere, the plan cites refugees from Venezuela, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua, among other nations.
More broadly, Biden’s proposal says that increased admissions could provide safety to refugees facing an increased threat of gender-based violence due to confinement and economic struggles during the coronavirus pandemic.
Private sponsorship pilot
Biden intends to launch a pilot refugee program that would allow private sponsors to fund costs associated with resettlement in the United States, according to his proposal to Congress.
The pilot program will focus on refugees reuniting with relatives in the United States and would not be limited by nationality, the proposal said.
Some refugee advocates see the effort as a step toward a broader economic sponsorship program that could also include businesses, universities and charity groups.
The al-Qassab family, Iraqi Christian refugees from Mosul, pose with their luggage at Beirut international airport ahead of their travel to the United States, Lebanon February 8, 2017. (Reuters/Mohamed Azakir)
Refugees from Iraq and Afghanistan
Biden issued an executive order on Feb. 4 that aims to speed up refugee processing and remove barriers that blocked some applicants.
The order called for a review of the Special Immigrant Visa program for refugees who aided US interests in Iraq and Afghanistan to determine whether there have been “undue delays” for applicants.
The Trump administration carved out 4,000 spots for Iraqi refugees in its 2020 cap for admissions but only 537 were resettled in the fiscal year, which ended on Sept. 30, 2020.
Climate change refugees
Biden’s order highlighted the role of climate change in the displacement of people around the world, calling on heads of several US agencies to produce a report on the matter by early August.
Rollback of trump policies
Biden’s executive order rescinded several restrictive Trump policies, including a 2019 order that required US states and localities to consent to receive refugees.
The rollback of that Trump policy will be partly symbolic since a Maryland-based federal judge blocked it nationwide more than a year ago, a decision that was upheld in January by the 4th US Circuit Court of Appeals.
Biden also rescinded a Trump order that called for “enhanced vetting” of refugees and specifically targeted 11 countries. Ten of the 11 affected countries were in the Middle East and Africa.
Read more:
Biden to issue executive order to build up US capacity to accept refugees
Biden administration extends program allowing Syrians to seek temporary refuge in US
White House says it needs time to work on a ‘moral’, ‘humane’ immigration process
Trump’s expanded travel ban targets Nigeria, five other countries
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