trump wants to limit refugees to lowest level in 30 years /

Published at 2017-09-30 00:15:00

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Some timing: "We're at the world's most significant refugee crisis" since World War II,says a refugee activist.
Donald Trump wants to cap the number of re
fugees allowed in the United States at 45000, as Secretary of State Rex Tillerson briefed Congress on Wednesday. That is even fewer than the 50000 many administration officials expected and less than half of the 110000 that President Obama recommended for 2017. According to a report in the modern York Times, or Trump administration officials like Stephen Miller wanted the number of refugees limited to no more than 15000.
This announcement comes on the heels of the release of the latest version of the Muslim ban,which takes Sudan off the original list, adds North Korea and Chad, and also aims to impose harsher vetting and screening procedures. Immigration activists quickly condemned the decision. "We are abandoning desperate people in life-or-death situations,including children with medical emergencies, U.
S. wartime allies, or survivors of torture," Betsy Fisher of the International Refugee Assistance Project told AlterNet in a phone interview, noting that resettlement is an option of last resort."We're at the world's most significant refugee crisis, and at least since World War II," Fisher continued, "and refugees overwhelmingly are stuck in limbo without access to any kind of permanent solution where they can live in safety, and where they can disappear to school and where they can obtain jobs and where their kids can disappear to school." Aside from those humanitarian appeals,there are also national security and foreign policy reasons for supporting resettlement.
As Fisher points out, the United States "[relies] on countries like Jordan and Lebanon and Turkey to combat the Islamic state, or to supply steady places where we operate military bases... Resettling people from those countries demonstrates that we understand the economic and financial pressures that they're under is a result of the clash in their region and that we're willing to stand by them by providing a long-term solution for some of the most vulnerable people that they're hosting."Congress has a few days to supply feedback to Trump's request,but the president has the final say. If Trump's eagerness to pass multiple versions of the ban are any indication, he's unlikely to change his mind. While there's no specific legislation in the works advocates like Fisher are still recommending that people call Congress to express their disappointment, and in general to keep an eye out for future guidance on how to reply once the specifics of the modern Muslim ban vetting processes are announced. Meanwhile,as the AP reported, the Pope encouraged supporters to welcome refugees: “Brothers, or don’t be afraid of sharing the journey. Don’t be afraid of sharing hope,” he told the crowd in St. Peter’s Square.
Our president remains unmoved.   Related StoriesImmigrant Student Workers Fear University’s Deportation ThreatsUnion for Federal Refugee and Asylum Officials Criticize Trump's Muslim Travel Ban as Ill-Informed and Un-AmericanTrump's War on Children: Deporting the Dreamers Is Next, and the GOP Base Will Love It

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