Sun.Star Cebu

Trump bars refugees to safeguard US vs. ‘radicals’

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President Donald Trump has barred all refugees from entering the United States for four months, and indefinite­ly halted any from Syria, saying the ban is needed to keep out “radical Islamic terrorists.”

The order Friday immediatel­y suspended a program that last year resettled in the US roughly 85,000 people displaced by war, political oppression, hunger and religious prejudice. Trump indefinite­ly blocked those fleeing Syria, where a civil war has raged, and imposed a 90-day ban on entry to the US from seven Muslim majority nations.

“We want to ensure that we are not admitting into our country the very threats our soldiers are fighting overseas,” Trump said as he signed the order at the Pentagon. “We only want to admit those into our country who will support our country and love deeply our people.”

Trump said the halt in the refugee program was necessary to give agencies time to develop a stricter screening system. While the order did not spell out what additional steps he wants the department­s of Homeland Security and State to take, the president directed officials to review the refugee applicatio­n and approval process and find any more measures that could prevent those who pose a threat from using the refugee program.

The US may admit refugees on a case-by-case basis during the freeze, and the government will continue to process requests from people claiming religious persecutio­n, “provided that the religion of the individual is a minority religion in the individual’s country.”

In an interview with CBN News, Trump said persecuted Christians would be given priority in applying for refugee status.

“We are going to help them,” Trump said. “They’ve been horribly treated.”

The order was signed on Trump’s most robust day of national security and foreign policy at the start of his presidency. He met with British Prime Minister Theresa May and had a lengthy phone call with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto.

As a candidate, Trump called for a temporary ban on all Muslim immigratio­n to the US He later shifted his focus to putting in place “extreme vetting” procedures to screen people coming to the US from countries with terrorism ties.

The State Department said the three-month ban in the directive applied to Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen—all Muslim-majority nations.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations said it would challenge the constituti­onality of the executive order.

“There is no evidence that refugees—the most thoroughly vetted of all people entering our nation— are a threat to national security,” Lena F. Masri, the group’s national litigation director. “This is an order that is based on bigotry, not reality.”

During the past budget year, the US accepted 84,995 refugees, including 12,587 people from Syria. President Barack Obama had set the refugee limit for this budget year at 110,000.

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