Lodi News-Sentinel

Do refugees receive enough vetting?

Sacramento newcomers describe their experience­s

- By Ryan Lillis, Loretta Kalb and Phillip Reese

SACRAMENTO — Ahmed Altalib said he waited six years in his native Iraq and underwent a rigorous vetting process before being granted refugee status in the United States. It took another year — and the interventi­on of a member of Congress — before his wife could join him in Sacramento. His parents and siblings are still waiting, marooned in Turkey as war wracks their home nation.

Altalib, 30, is one of millions of internatio­nal refugees who have resettled in the United States in recent decades after undergoing what they describe as a complicate­d and sometimes confusing vetting system. With President Donald Trump now blocking the arrival of all refugees for 120 days and suspending visits by people from seven predominan­tly Muslim countries, Altalib and other refugees are wondering if their friends and relatives will ever join them in the United States.

“I’ve been following the Twitter account for President Donald Trump,” Altalib said Monday, “and I don’t think we will get anything to give me some hope.”

Altalib’s case is an extreme one. Immigratio­n experts said the process for refugee visas typically takes between 18 months and three years, during which applicants undergo screenings by counterter­rorism agents, medical exams and other checks. Still, Altalib was also lucky. Of the more than 21 million refugees registered with the United Nations, 85,000 were granted resettleme­nt in the United States last year.

The United States has admitted an average of 78,000 refugees each year since 1975, according to the State Department. Refugee admissions ranged from a low of 20,000 in 1977 to a high of 207,000 in 1980. California gets more refugees than any other state; last year, about one in 10 refugees who came to the United States resettled in California.

Among a series of executive orders, Trump vowed last week to work out an “extreme vetting” process for refugee applicants, adding more scrutiny to a system that Sacramento-area refugees and some immigratio­n experts say is already extensive.

“We only want to admit those into our country who will support our country and love deeply our people,” Trump said at the Pentagon on Friday.

Trump’s order capped the number of refugees allowed in the nation each year at 50,000, compared to the 78,000 a year that Barack Obama let in, on average, over his eight years in office.

For the world’s refugees, the process of finding a new home begins when they register with the United Nations High Commission for Refugees, which builds a biographic­al file on each applicant. Those who are accepted and want to apply to the United States are referred to a resettleme­nt support agency to begin a series of background checks by federal authoritie­s, including national counterter­rorism agents, the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security.

Federal agents conduct in-person interviews with potential refugees overseas. Fingerprin­ts are run through terrorism watchlists, and refugees undergo medical testing. Syrian refugees are subjected to more rigorous background checks.

Refugees who make it through the process are matched with organizati­ons in the United States that offer English-language classes, help place children into schools and assist adults in finding employment and housing. The Sacramento region has a network of such groups, and the area has become one of the nation’s top destinatio­ns for refugees. Even so, a Sacramento Bee investigat­ion last year found that many Afghan refugees who served with the U.S. military ended up living in substandar­d housing in Sacramento and struggled to find jobs.

Ken Gude, a senior fellow with the leftleanin­g think tank Center for American Progress, said refugees undergo layers of vetting beyond what typical visa applicants go through, most notably extra scrutiny by counterter­rorism officials. He said that’s not surprising, given that most refugees flee war-torn nations with unreliable government databases of their own.

“Overall, (becoming a refugee is) the hardest way to get into the United States,” Gude said, adding that many other visa applicatio­ns are processed in a matter of weeks.

Immigratio­n advocates point out that no refugee has committed an act of terrorism on U.S. soil since 1980, when the current system for admitting refugees was put in place.

Critics of the current system cite a lack of reliable informatio­n from foreign government­s as cause for concern. They argue that even in relatively stable countries, there’s no guarantee that government­s are sharing reliable or truthful informatio­n on refugees.

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