Truro News

‘I am powerless’

Revised U.S. travel ban leaves Syrians confused, yet hopeful

-

It’s been an emotional roller coaster for Mahmoud Mansour and his family, Syrian refugees tapped for possible resettleme­nt to the United States, since President Donald Trump issued his first travel ban six weeks ago.

The original ban, which barred Syrian refugees from the U.S. until further notice, devastated Mansour’s family of six, which has been undergoing security vetting ahead of resettleme­nt for the past year.

The revised ban, signed Monday, no longer singles out displaced Syrians but suspends the entire refugee program for four months to allow for a security review. Trump also reduced the maximum global number of refugees the U.S. is willing to absorb in 2017 from 110,000 to 50,000.

Mansour, an artisan who embroiders traditiona­l dresses, said he is confused about what Trump’s revised executive order means for his family’s prospects in the U.S.

“We hope that this new order will carry a glimmer of hope,” he said in his small apartment in Jordan’s capital, Amman, which also doubles as his workshop.

Others in the family have

been luckier.

Two older brothers, Ahmed and Suleiman, managed to reach the U.S. as part of the resettleme­nt program, joining an uncle, a U.S. citizen, in Connecticu­t. Ahmed travelled last year from Egypt, while Suleiman and his family reached the U.S. from Amman a day before Trump’s inaugurati­on.

“I am not lucky,” said Mansour, adding he and Suleiman

had started the vetting procedures in Jordan roughly at the same time.

The revised travel ban means prolonged uncertaint­y for Mansour, his wife and four daughters, ranging in age from three to 13.

“I am powerless,” he said. “I have to wait.”

Like other Syrian refugees, he said his family ran from danger, and doesn’t pose a threat to U.S. security. The Mansours fled Syria’s civil war in December 2012 after the fighting, including random shelling, reached their neighbourh­ood on the outskirts of the capital, Damascus.

Close to five million Syrians have fled their country since 2011, and millions more have been displaced inside Syria. Most refugees moved to neighbouri­ng countries, including Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey, where they have strained the education and health systems, as well as municipal services.

Lebanon hosts close to one million displaced Syrians, more refugees per capita than any other country in the world.

U.S. ally Jordan, which has taken in more than 650,000 Syrian refugees, has said the world must to do more to help regional host countries, including by absorbing more refugees.

In Beirut, the head of a leading internatio­nal relief organizati­on criticized the sharply reduced U.S. cap to refugee entry.

David Miliband, head of the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee, said the lowered cap is a “historic assault on refugee resettleme­nt to the United States, and a really catastroph­ic cut at a time there are more refugees around the world than ever before.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Syrian refugee Mahmoud Mansour, 43, is shown with his daughters Ruba, 9, and Sahar, 3. Mansour, who has been undergoing vetting for resettleme­nt to the U.S. for the past year, says he was devastated by President Donald Trump’s travel ban and remains...
AP PHOTO Syrian refugee Mahmoud Mansour, 43, is shown with his daughters Ruba, 9, and Sahar, 3. Mansour, who has been undergoing vetting for resettleme­nt to the U.S. for the past year, says he was devastated by President Donald Trump’s travel ban and remains...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada