USA TODAY International Edition

U.S. closes door to multitude of refugees

Entry granted to lowest number in 15 years

- Alan Gomez

President Trump had to battle the courts and vocal opposition, but by the end of the year, he was able to slash refugee admissions into the USA to historic lows.

From Inaugurati­on Day to Dec. 31, his administra­tion accepted 29,022 refugees, the lowest number since at least 2002, according to State Department data. Comparable figures before then are not available.

The previous low during that time frame (29,468) came in 2002, when the United States slowed down all avenues of legal immigratio­n after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

The decline will continue in 2018 because Trump instituted an annual cap of 45,000 refugees a year, the lowest cap since Congress created the Refugee Resettleme­nt Program in 1980. Presidents have the authority to unilateral­ly set the annual refugee cap, which has been as high as 217,000 under President Reagan and hovered around 70,000 to 80,000 under the George W. Bush and Obama administra­tions.

For some, Trump’s reduction represents a campaign promise fulfilled.

“Elections have consequenc­es,” said Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, which advocates for lower levels of legal and illegal immigratio­n. “This is what he said he’s going to do, and he’s doing it.”

Opponents of the president said the numbers represent a loss not only for refugees but also for America’s economy and its standing in the world.

Ali Noorani, executive director of the National Immigratio­n Forum, which has advocated for a higher refugee cap, said many Midwestern cities depend on refugees to work in the

meatpackin­g and poultry plants that sustain their struggling economies.

As more migrants flee their homelands, Noorani said, this is the worst time for the United States to retreat from its historic role as a “moral beacon” for the oppressed.

“There are ways to help refugees get to places of safety and begin a new life that serves the American interest,” Noorani said. “Past administra­tions have been able to do that. This administra­tion is not so interested.”

Refugees are a special class of immigrants who are granted asylum because they fear persecutio­n based on their race, religion, nationalit­y or political opinion in their home country. They represent a small fraction of the roughly 1 million immigrants allowed into the country each year.

Trump argued that the refugee program is exposed to fraud and could be used by terrorists to infiltrate the USA. The Trump administra­tion was able to halt the refugee program for several months to review the system.

In October, Trump signed an executive order that restarted the refugee program, adding restrictio­ns that severely limited the number of refugees who could enter the USA.

 ?? ORESTIS PANAGIOTOU/EPA-EFE ?? Refugees wait for transport after they arrived on the ferry Nissos Samos from Lesbos island at the port of Piraeus, Greece, on Dec. 11.
ORESTIS PANAGIOTOU/EPA-EFE Refugees wait for transport after they arrived on the ferry Nissos Samos from Lesbos island at the port of Piraeus, Greece, on Dec. 11.
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