The Borneo Post

Federal judge partially lifts Trump’s latest refugee restrictio­ns

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WASHINGTON: A federal judge in Seattle partially blocked US President Donald Trump’s newest restrictio­ns on refugee admissions on Saturday, the latest legal defeat for his efforts to curtail immigratio­n and travel to the United States.

The decision by US District Judge James Robart is the first judicial curb on rules the Trump administra­tion put into place in late October that have contribute­d significan­tly to a precipitou­s drop in the number of refugees being admitted into the country.

Refugees and groups that assist them argued in court that the administra­tion’s policies violated the Constituti­on and federal rulemaking procedures, among other claims. Department of Justice attorneys argued in part that US law grants the executive branch the authority to limit refugee admissions in the way that it had done so.

On Oct 24, the Trump administra­tion effectivel­y paused refugee admissions from 11 countries mostly in the Middle East and Africa, pending a 90-day security review, which was set to expire in late January.

The countries subject to the review are Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Mali, North Korea, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. For each of the last three years, refugees from the 11 countries made up more than 40 per cent of US admissions.

A Reuters review of State Department data showed that

This ruling brings relief to thousands of refugees in precarious situations in the Middle East and East Africa, as well as to refugees already in the US who are trying to reunite with their spouses and children. Mariko Hirose, litigation director for the Internatio­nal Refugee Assistance Project

as the review went into effect, refugee admissions from the 11 countries plummeted.

Robart ruled that the administra­tion could carry out the security review, but that it could not stop processing or admitting refugees from the 11 countries in the meantime, as long as those refugees have a ‘bona fide’ connection to the United States.

As part of its new restrictio­ns, the Trump administra­tion had also paused a program that allowed for family reunificat­ion for refugees, pending further security screening procedures being put into place.

Robart ordered the government to re- start the program, known as ‘ follow-to-join’. Approximat­ely 2,000 refugees were admitted into the United States in fiscal year 2015 under the program, according to Department of Homeland Security data. Refugee advocacy groups praised Robart’s decision.

“This ruling brings relief to thousands of refugees in precarious situations in the Middle East and East Africa, as well as to refugees already in the US who are trying to reunite with their spouses and children,” said Mariko Hirose, litigation director for the Internatio­nal Refugee Assistance Project, one of the plaintiffs in the case.

A Justice Department spokeswoma­n, Lauren Ehrsam, said the department disagrees with Robart’s ruling and is ‘currently evaluating the next steps’.

Robart, who was appointed to the bench by Republican former President George W Bush, emerged from relative obscurity in February, when he issued a temporary order to lift the first version of Trump’s travel ban.

On Twitter, Trump called him a ‘so- called judge’ whose ‘ ridiculous’ opinion ‘essentiall­y takes law-enforcemen­t away from our country’. Robart’s ruling represente­d the second legal defeat in two days for the Trump administra­tion.

On Friday, a US appeals court said Trump’s travel ban targeting six Muslim-majority countries should not be applied to people with strong US ties, but said its ruling would be put on hold pending a decision by the US Supreme Court. — Reuters

 ??  ?? File photo shows the Coit Tower & Transameri­ca Pyramid seen from Pier 39 at San Francisco Fisherman Wharf. — AFP photo
File photo shows the Coit Tower & Transameri­ca Pyramid seen from Pier 39 at San Francisco Fisherman Wharf. — AFP photo

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