Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Obama plans to expand refugee program

Aims to stem flow of Central American children migrants

- By David Nakamura McClatchy Newspapers and The New York Times contribute­d.

WASHINGTON — The Obama administra­tion announced plans Tuesday to expand a refugee program for Central American children who are fleeing danger, part of a broader effort to stem the unregulate­d flow of unaccompan­ied minors across the southern U.S. border.

The State Department program, launched in December 2014 after a massive influx of children that year swamped border patrol stations, allows children from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras to seek protection in the United States by applying within their own country.

So far, however, the impact has been small, and the White House on Tuesday conceded that its efforts to protect migrants fleeing dangerous conditions had left too many people with no recourse. U.S. officials said 2,884 children have been granted refugee status from a pool of 9,500 applicants, and just 267 of them have entered the U.S. That number is minuscule compared with the thousands of children and families from those nations who are apprehende­d by U.S. Border Patrol while trying to enter the country each month.

In June, for example, more than 11,000 children and families crossed the border illegally, according to statistics provided by the Department of Homeland Security. U.S. officials and humanitari­an workers have warned that the migrants are often abused or put in danger during the journey north under the guidance of human smugglers.

“The goal is for individual­s who have legitimate humanitari­an claims not to take the perilous journey and really accept our outstretch­ed arms of relief,” DHS deputy secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said on a conference call with reporters.

Under the expansion plans, three additional categories of people would be allowed to apply: older siblings of a qualified child, provided they have a parent already living lawfully in the U.S.; the biological parents of a qualified child; and caregivers of a qualified child, provided a parent is living lawfully in the U.S.

In addition, Obama administra­tion officials said, Mexico has agreed to increase the number of Central American refugees it will accept under its own program. And Costa Rica has agreed to provide safe harbor to as many as 200 Central American children considered in grave danger while their cases are being examined by the U.S. State Department.

Humanitari­an advocates credited the administra­tion for taking additional steps, but they acknowledg­ed that the scale of the Central American refugee crisis remains daunting, and they worried it may be too late to make the policies stick if a different administra­tion — with a different focus — takes over.

The Obama administra­tion was slow to respond to the surge in migrants from Central America that peaked in 2014 when tens of thousands of women and children overwhelme­d the border patrol stations.

The president and his top aides moved to stem the influx, pressuring the Central American nations, along with Mexico, to tighten their borders and prevent the families from undertakin­g the trip. Congress also allocated $750 million in aid to the region.

Critics have accused the administra­tion of ignoring the humanitari­an crisis as it focused on enforcemen­t and detention of apprehende­d children and parents in large family detention centers. More than 121 people were apprehende­d during immigratio­n raids over the New Year’s holiday. Advocates say the deportatio­ns have continued

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