By Julie
Hirschfeld Davis, New York Times
WASHINGTON
— The White House on Tuesday announced a substantial expansion of a program to
admit Central American refugees to the United States, conceding that its efforts
to protect migrants fleeing dangerous conditions had left too many people with
no recourse.
The
administration said it would broaden an initiative that currently lets
unaccompanied Central American children enter the United States as refugees, allowing their entire
families to qualify, including siblings older than 21, parents and other
relatives who act as caregivers.
It is
unclear how many refugees might be eligible, but during its two years, the
program for children has drawn 9,500 applicants, which could eventually grow to
many times that with the broader criteria.
The
expansion was denounced by Republicans, and it sharpened a contrast with Donald
J. Trump, who has centered much of his presidential campaign on a call to shut
out immigrants.
Republicans
said the Obama administration should be focused on tackling what they called a
border crisis. The expansion would instead essentially open an entirely new
channel for Central American families escaping endemic violence to gain legal
entrance to the United States .
“What we
have seen is that our current efforts to date have been insufficient to address
the number of people who may have legitimate refugee claims, and there are
insufficient pathways for those people to present their claims,” Amy Pope, a
deputy Homeland Security adviser, said in a conference call to announce the
changes. She said the revisions showed a recognition that “the criteria is too
narrow to meet the categories of people who we believe would qualify under our
refugee laws, but they just don’t have the mechanism to apply.”
The White
House also said it had reached an agreement with Costa Rica to serve as a temporary host site
for the most vulnerable migrants from El Salvador , Guatemala and Honduras while they wait to be processed as
refugees. These migrants would first undergo security screening in their home
countries. Costa Rica would accept up to 200 people at a
time among those who are found to be eligible, for periods of six months.
The United
Nations high commissioner for refugees has agreed to set up an unusual process
to review requests from potential refugees while they are in their home
countries. Administration officials also said they would begin reviewing
applications from refugees in their home countries, a step they hoped would
discourage people from making the dangerous trip to the United States border.
Republicans
said the expansion was the latest example of the White House’s misuse of its
authority.
“Once
again, the Obama administration has decided to blow wide open any small
discretion it has in order to reward individuals who have no lawful presence in
the United States with the ability to bring their family members here,”
Representative Robert W. Goodlatte, Republican of Virginia and the chairman of
the House Judiciary Committee, said in a statement. “Rather than take the steps
necessary to end the ongoing crisis at the border, the Obama administration
perpetuates it by abusing a legal tool meant to be used sparingly to bring
people to the United States and instead applying it to the
masses in Central
America .”
In making
the revisions, President Obama was bowing to years of complaints from advocates
for immigrants who have argued that he has turned a blind eye to the plight of
refugees at the southern border. They complained that he has instead focused on
deterring migrants from coming to the United States and deporting them if they do,
even as he has expanded his effort to welcome people fleeing violence and
persecution elsewhere, including those displaced by Syria ’s civil war.
The
situation in Central
America
“is heartbreaking and it’s distressing, and that is why the president had not
been satisfied with the steps that we’d been taking,” said Eric Schultz, the
deputy White House press secretary. “That’s why we have been able to expand
some of these programs.”
Ángel
Herrera, the coordinator for the pastoral care of migrants in the Roman
Catholic Diocese of San Pedro Sula, Honduras, said the news that the United States would open its doors to more
refugees was welcome.
“Violence
has overwhelmed all limits,” said Mr. Herrera, speaking by telephone from one
of the region’s most murderous cities. “The insecurity is tremendous. People
see no other option than to emigrate.”
The
American program, he said, has not had much success because the process is slow
and people do not understand it. But the church has begun to organize workshops
to explain the program and guide people through it.
The Obama
administration has grappled with how to respond to an influx of migrants from El Salvador , Guatemala and Honduras , which spiked in 2014 with the
arrival of thousands of unaccompanied children streaming over the border in South Texas . The administration has tried to
address the root causes of the migration by allocating $750 million in foreign
aid to Central
America
and pledging to set up new programs to extend humanitarian protection to those
who need it.
But its
primary response to date has been to try to discourage migrants from making the
journey to the United States or entrusting their children to
smugglers. The administration has also accelerated the deportation of newly
arrived migrants — most of them held briefly in detention centers before being
released to pursue asylum claims in immigration courts, often with no assistance
from lawyers — if they are not granted asylum.
Only 600
people from Central America have entered the United States as refugees since
the influx began, officials said, including 267 children under the program
created for minors with parents living in the United States who are citizens or
legal immigrants. The pace is increasing, however, with 2,880 minors approved
to live in the United States . Now, that program will be further
broadened to family members of such children.
People in
the program will be screened to see if they meet the stringent requirements for
refugee status, showing that they have been forced to flee their country
because of a well-founded fear of persecution on the basis of race, religion,
nationality or political persuasion.
But people
who do not meet the requirements could be offered an entry permission known as
parole, according to a senior administration official. That status does not
open a pathway to citizenship, but it allows migrants to enter legally to join
family members in the United States . Many of the children admitted to
the program have been paroled, the official said.
“It shows
the administration now recognizes this is primarily a refugee flow, not an
economic one,” said Kevin Appleby, the director of international migration
policy at the Center for Migration Studies in New York .
Advocates
called the changes a long overdue step that moved the administration in the
right direction after years of mismanaging the Central American crisis.
“We have
long argued that what is happening is a refugee emergency and should be treated
like one, and these modest measures at least recognize this reality,” said
Frank Sharry, the executive director of America ’s Voice, an immigration reform
group.
But he
said the administration must do much more, including affording migrants who
arrive in the United States “full and fair proceedings.”
“The
administration has relied on an enforcement-centric approach that sends
vulnerable young people back to countries where they may well face death,” Mr.
Sharry said. “Instead, we need to respond to this humanitarian emergency with a
comprehensive refugee-centric strategy.”
Ben Ferro
(Editor, InsideINS.com)
benferro@insideins.com
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