Sentinel & Enterprise

Rights group sues over US denying Afghans humanitari­an entry

- By Philip Marcelo

BOSTON » A Boston civil rights group is challengin­g the U. S. government’s denial of humanitari­an relief to scores of Afghans fleeing from the Taliban.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Massachuse­tts filed a lawsuit in Boston federal court Wednesday on behalf of Afghans and their New England-area families seeking to bring them to the U. S. through a rarely used immigratio­n provision known as humanitari­an parole.

The organizati­on says the denials left Afghans stranded and at risk of being killed, after the hardline Taliban seized control of the country by force last August as U. S. and other foreign forces withdrew in the chaotic end to a 20-year war.

One Afghan plaintiff, who is only named by pseudonym, applied for humanitari­an parole for six family members, only to have three of them killed while awaiting decisions on their requests, according to the suit.

In its lawsuit, the ACLU cites the experience­s of Afghan women who held prominent positions before the Taliban imposed more restrictiv­e measures, as well as Afghans who worked for the U.S. government or the U.s.-backed Afghan government.

The humanitari­an parole program doesn’t provide a direct path to lawful permanent residence, but those on it can apply for asylum or other immigratio­n relief if eligible. The program allows people to temporaril­y enter the country for “urgent humanitari­an or significan­t public benefit reasons,” according to USCIS’S website.

Federal agencies named in the suit, including the State Department, Homeland Security Department and U. S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, didn’t respond to emails seeking comment Thursday.

The suit, which the ACLU filed along with the Boston law firm Mintz, argues that the government promised endangered Afghans they were eligible for humanitari­an parole.

Immigratio­n officials abruptly stopped processing humanitari­an parole requests after thousands of Afghans applied for the program last August and September, the ACLU states. Then in November, USCIS imposed stricter standards that resulted in most Afghan applicatio­ns being denied.

The ACLU argues the changes violated federal rules and requests a federal judge order applicatio­ns be promptly adjudicate­d or readjudica­ted under the original standards.

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