Los Angeles Times

U.S. will intensify vetting of refugees

A new partial ban on people from 11 nations is also announced.

- By Jaweed Kaleem jaweed.kaleem@latimes.com

The Trump administra­tion said it would resume admitting refugees to the U.S. after the expiration Tuesday of a four-month ban on all resettleme­nt but increase vetting, and announced a new partial ban on refugees from 11 countries.

The new vetting rules, which would apply to all new refugees admitted under a 45,000 per year cap that became effective Oct. 1, could slow the refugee approval process and halt admission for certain groups, according to resettleme­nt groups and government officials.

Department of Homeland Security and State Department officials would not give details about exact changes in vetting — which currently takes years for many refugees — or name the 11 “higher-risk nationalit­ies” whose refugees would be subject to “case-by-case” approval.

But refugee groups that were briefed by government officials called the rules unnecessar­y and said they would probably affect some of the largest refugee population­s in the world.

“There isn’t anything in what we have heard or seen that will make us safer,” said Melanie Nezer, a spokeswoma­n for the refugee resettleme­nt group HIAS, one of nine government-approved agencies.

Nezer said new procedures would include requests for applicants to provide all phone numbers and home and email addresses for places they have lived for more than 30 days in the last 10 years. Currently, refugees must give that informatio­n for the last five years.

She said the government would require refugees to share contact informatio­n for all family members. Previously, that request was made only for family members who live in the U.S. or have U.S. connection­s.

“Refugees are f leeing war. They may not remember all informatio­n, or they may give accidental­ly incorrect informatio­n and be delayed,” Nezer said.

Refugee resettleme­nt groups said government officials told them that nationals of Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Mali, North Korea, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria and Yemen would be approved only on a case-bycase basis for 90 days while the government further considered vetting for those countries. The countries accounted for more than 40% of refugee admissions to the U.S. over the last year. In addition, some Palestinia­ns would face similar hurdles.

Resettleme­nt organizati­ons said they feared that refugees who had already passed vetting but had not yet entered the U.S. would be blocked.

“Hundreds, possibly thousands of families that have gone through the exhaustive vetting process in good faith and were promised refuge in the United States will see their eligibilit­y revoked and be exposed to even further danger,” said a statement from the agency Church World Service.

Government officials said the changes would protect the United States.

“The U.S. refugee admissions program takes seriously its commitment to ensure the security and integrity of the program,” said Jennifer Higgins, associate director of Refugee, Asylum and Internatio­nal Operations for U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services.

The refugee ban that expired Tuesday applied to refugees without close relatives in the United States. Trump signed it as part of his travel ban, which federal judges struck down before the Supreme Court allowed parts of it to proceed over the summer. The travel ban slashed by more than half the refugee cap President Obama put into place.

Trump further cut the cap last month for the new fiscal year that began in October. The 45,000 limit is the lowest since the government began setting refugee admission ceilings in 1980.

The president also signed a new travel ban that federal judges in Hawaii and Maryland struck down last week. That ban does not mention refugees. The Justice Department is appealing the judges’ rulings.

 ?? Ted S. Warren Associated Press ?? AT A FEDERAL courthouse in Seattle, people demonstrat­e in May against President Trump’s policies.
Ted S. Warren Associated Press AT A FEDERAL courthouse in Seattle, people demonstrat­e in May against President Trump’s policies.

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