U.S. Record
On Accepting Refugees
By Somini Sengupta
January 17, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"NYT"
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Among the
Obamas’ guests at the State of the Union address
on Tuesday was Refaai Hamo, a middle-aged widower
with sunken eyes, a side-swept mop of silver hair
and a harrowing account of losing his wife and his
daughter in an air raid over his home in
Syria.
His presence
in the gallery was meant to send a signal to the
world that the United States — or at least this
administration, in its last year in the White House
— believes that people like Mr. Hamo deserve a
chance to restart their lives in this country.
“The world
respects us not just for our arsenal,”
President Obama said in his address. “It
respects us for our diversity and our openness.”
The gesture
raised an obvious question: Has the United States
lived up to its idea of itself as a haven for
those fleeing war and persecution?
The numbers
offer a partial answer, and they reflect the acute
dilemmas that confront countries worldwide amid a
historic global crisis.
The
United Nations says that an estimated 20 million
people around the world, half of them children, have
fled their home countries because of conflict or
persecution. The war in
Syria is now the single largest source of new
refugees, casting about 4.4 million Syrians out of
their country since the conflict began nearly five
years ago.
But unlike in
1951 — when the
international refugee convention was forged in
the aftermath of World War II, requiring countries
to offer protection to those scattered by war and
persecution — the political calculus for world
leaders has sharply shifted. The costs of taking in
refugees have grown and the payoffs, many feel, have
diminished.
First, the
numbers.
The United
States has taken in around 2,500 Syrian refugees
since 2012, shortly after the war began.
Canada took in
more than that in the last two months of 2015 alone.
Brazil has
offered what it calls “humanitarian visas” to three
times as many Syrian refugees as the United States
has accepted — 7,380
at last count by the United Nations refugee
agency.
Switzerland
has issued 4,700 special-category visas for Syrians
who have family in the country. And Australia, which
has come under international criticism for turning
away boats of potential refugees from South and
Southeast Asia, has said it will take 12,000 from
Syria and Iraq.
Germany is in
a category of its own, with Syrians making up the
largest single group (428,500) of the 1.1 million
people who were registered as refugees and asylum
seekers there in 2015.
For the United
States, as for much of the Western world, the
political costs of accepting refugees are high.
Many people in
the United States are worried about terrorists
sneaking in through refugee programs. Crimes like
the sexual assaults of women in Germany on New
Year’s Eve, in which the authorities said asylum
seekers were involved, led
Chancellor Angela Merkel to propose tougher laws
regulating asylum seekers.
Political
figures on both continents have also become openly
opposed to accepting Muslims in particular.
Donald J. Trump, the Republican presidential
candidate, proposed a moratorium on the admission of
Muslims to the United States, just as Prime Minister
Viktor Orban of Hungary has warned about the
need to “keep
Europe Christian.”
Perhaps as
important, the political rewards for taking in
refugees have diminished.
During the
Cold War, the West scored political points by
welcoming people from the Eastern bloc. It was a way
to convey that the Western way of life was better
and more attractive than life behind the Iron
Curtain. It was one reason, historians say, that in
1980, in the aftermath of the Vietnam War, the
United States took in as many as 207,000 refugees,
many from Vietnam. In the late 1980s and 1990s, the
United States welcomed tens of thousands of people
as the Soviet Union was dissolving.
But America’s
admission of refugees from around the world
virtually ground to a halt after the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks. The numbers have slowly crept
back up in recent years, to about 70,000 in 2015.
The Obama administration has set a target of 85,000
this year and of 100,000 in 2017, which as American
officials point out makes this country one of the
most welcoming in the developed world.
But the goal
of accepting 10,000 Syrians this year, as Mr. Obama
has said he wants to do, is likely to be difficult.
It takes an average of two years for those
candidates to be screened and vetted by American
officials.
Most of the
Syrian refugees are cramped into three neighboring
countries — Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey. But they are
not allowed to work in some of those countries, or
go to school in some places. And with donor money
drying up, United Nations agencies have repeatedly
slashed food rations, plunging hundreds of thousands
of refugees into deep poverty. In Jordan and
Lebanon, a vast majority of Syrian refugees live
below the national poverty line.
Last week, the
new United Nations high commissioner for refugees,
Filippo Grandi, described his agency as
“navigating extraordinarily difficult waters.”
“The
combination of multiple conflicts and resulting mass
displacement, fresh challenges to asylum, the
funding gap between humanitarian needs and
resources, and growing xenophobia is very
dangerous,” he said.
Mr. Grandi, an
Italian, called on Europe to share the numbers of
asylum seekers pouring onto the Continent in a fair
and equitable way. The plea seemed to fall on deaf
ears.
Germany and
Sweden, overwhelmed by the numbers seeking to
get into their countries, tightened border controls,
leaving thousands of migrants and asylum seekers
stranded along the migrant trail.
On Monday, a
vice president of the European Commission, Frans
Timmermans, leaned on Turkey to do more to stem the
flow of people across the Aegean Sea. By law, Europe
cannot send back people who are fleeing war and
persecution. Instead, it has pressed its neighbor,
Turkey, to stop people from trying to reach European
shores, in exchange for billions of euros in
development aid.
All the while,
many more Syrians are trying to flee, with Jordan
reporting this week that 16,000 Syrians are in a
no-man’s land in the wide-open desert along the
Jordan-Syria border. Jordan is letting in fewer than
100 of them a day, mainly, Jordanian officials say,
out of concern for its security.
Similar
concerns affect the resettlement of Syrians in the
United States. Many of the Syrian refugees hoping to
be admitted to the United States are waiting in
Lebanon. But American officials stopped interviewing
them over a year ago, out of concern for the safety
of its own Homeland Security personnel, making it
unclear how long it will take to screen applicants.
© 2016
The New York Times Company |