The Manila Times

B6 US to admit refugees; 11 countries blocked

- AFP

WASHINGTON, D.C.: The United States will resume accepting refugees after a 120-day ban, but arrivals from 11 “high-risk” countries, most of them home to Muslim majorities, will still (Wednesday in Manila).

The temporary ban, which President Donald Trump fought to implement since January and after a Supreme Court decision, procedures and set tougher screening procedures.

Jennifer Higgins, associate director for refugees at the US Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services agency, said applicants will face “enhanced” vetting as a result of the review, including more indepth checks of their social media presence and connection­s.

“The security of the American people is our highest priority,” she

Trump issued a new executive order on refugees late Tuesday that replaced the expiring one, which was a part of his controvers­ial travel ban that evoked a series of court challenges on the grounds it targeted Muslims.

The new order will accompany a sharp cutback on refugee admissions under Trump.

President Barack Obama set the refugee cap, for the fiscal year that ended on September 30, 2017, at 110,000.

But after becoming president, Trump slashed that to 53,000 even as he fought to put in place a full ban.

For fiscal year 2018, Trump has cut the maximum number to 45,000.

countries, but said they are the same as on a 2015 list for tougher screening, requiring a “Security Advisory Opinion.”

They are now subject to another 90-day security and intelligen­ce say what could happen then.

Refugee agencies pointed to the affected countries as Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Mali, North Korea, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.

All but North Korea are mainly Muslim population­s, and in the past have been the source of the largest portion of US refugee admissions.

They represent close to half of all the refugees entering the of 53,716 refugees the US accepted, 22,150 came from Syria, Iraq, Iran and Somalia.

The officials said the government would still review certain special cases from the 11 countries, without describing what would qualify them.

Kathleen Newland, a senior fellow of the Migration Policy backup of refugees already with approval waiting to get into the United States.

But the net effect over the longer term will be that the top will not be able to lean on the United States to accept as many people as in the past.

“I expect they just won’t be referring as many cases for US resettleme­nt,” Newland said.

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