Albuquerque Journal

872 refugees will be allowed into U.S.

Administra­tion’s 120-day ban will not affect those who were already traveling

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion said 872 refugees will be allowed into the United States this week despite a presidenti­al order suspending the U.S. refugees program.

Kevin McAleenan, the acting head of Customs and Border Protection, said Tuesday that the refugees were already traveling and stopping them would cause “undue hardship.” Their admission comes despite President Donald Trump’s warnings that refugees like these, vetted under the Obama administra­tion, were not adequately screened to ensure they are not potential terrorists.

The refugee ban was part of an executive order signed Friday by Trump that has stoked outrage and protests. Besides the 120-day ban for refugees, the order also bans entry to the United States from citizens of seven majority Muslim countries and indefinite­ly bars travel by Syrians to the U.S.

At a news briefing with McAleenan, Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly said the travel ban for the seven countries may be extended and other countries could be added to the list.

“I would be less than honest if I told you that some of those countries that are currently on the list may not be taken off the list anytime soon,” Kelly said. “They’re countries that are in various states of collapse” and may not be able to verify that people applying to come to the United States are who they say they are.

In his first briefing with reporters since he was confirmed, Kelly defended Trump’s order and said its intention is to keep would-be terrorist out of the United States and not serve as a ban on Muslims. Early in his campaign, Trump had called for a ban on Muslims entering the United States.

Kelly said “the vast majority of the 1.7 billion Muslims that live on this planet, the vast majority of them have, all other things being equal, have access to the United States.”

The troubled rollout of the immigratio­n and travel order prompted an interagenc­y phone call on Monday, according to two U.S. officials. Participan­ts included top Trump advisers Michael Flynn, Steve Bannon and Stephen Miller, along with Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly and Acting Secretary of State Tom Shannon.

The officials said Kelly and Shannon told the White House they would take the lead in clearing up the situation. One of the officials said Bannon and Miller agreed to let the agency leaders take the lead after prodding from Flynn, Trump’s national security adviser.

Kelly had a briefing Tuesday, in which he sought to clarify the extent of the new refugee and immigratio­n and travel restrictio­ns. The State Department, meanwhile, issued coordinate­d guidance to embassies and consulates overseas.

Kelly, a retired Marine general, also said the order was “not a travel ban” but a “temporary pause that allows us to better review the existing refugee and visa-vetting system.”

White House spokesman Sean Spicer made that point, too, in his daily briefing to reporters. But Trump referred to it as a “ban” in a tweet Tuesday defending the decision not to provide advanced notice to travelers. Spicer also called it a ban on Monday.

“If the ban were announced with a one week notice, the ‘bad’ would rush into our country during that week,” Trump wrote. “A lot of bad ‘dudes’ out there!”

The rollout of the order has been widely criticized, a point McAlleenan conceded, saying communicat­ion among government agencies had “not been the best.”

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