The Borneo Post

US to deny asylum to illegal border crossers

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WASHINGTON: The United States will no longer allow people who enter the country illegally to claim asylum, officials said Thursday, unveiling a controvers­ial new crackdown on immigratio­n.

The restrictio­n on asylum claims will seek to address what a senior administra­tion official called the “historical­ly unparallel­ed abuse of our immigratio­n system” along the border with Mexico.

The new rule was published by the Department of Homeland Security and is expected to get President Donald Trump’s signature shortly — as well as face court challenges.

The American Civil Liberties Union said that the right to request asylum must be granted to anyone entering the country, regardless of where they were.

“US law specifical­ly allows individual­s to apply for asylum whether or not they are at a port of entry. It is illegal to circumvent that by agency or presidenti­al decree,” the ACLU said.

But according to the new rule, Trump has authority to restrict illegal immigratio­n “if he determines it to be in the national interest.”

Trump’s administra­tion argues that he has the executive power to curb immigratio­n in the name of national security, a power he invoked right after taking office with a controvers­ial ban on travelers from several mostlyMusl­im countries — the final version of which was upheld by the US Supreme Court on June 26 after a protracted legal battle.

“Today’s rule applies this important principle to aliens who violate such a suspension or restrictio­n regarding the southern border,” Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen and acting attorney general Matthew Whitaker said.

Those seeking political or other kinds of asylum — nearly all of them coming from impoverish­ed and violent crime- plagued countries of Central America — will be heard exclusivel­y at the border crossings, administra­tion officials told journalist­s.

This is expected to put a dent in those streaming into an already overburden­ed system, officials said, noting that there is a backlog of more than 700,000 cases in the immigratio­n courts.

Many politician­s on both sides of the aisle agree that the US immigratio­n system is hugely inefficien­t and unable to cope with demand.

However, Trump’s focus on the issue during campaignin­g for Tuesday’s hotly contested midterm congressio­nal elections was criticized as veering into immigrant- bashing and even racism.

In speeches and on Twitter, Trump hammered away nearly daily at ‘caravans’ of a few thousand impoverish­ed Central Americans that periodical­ly attempt to walk up through Mexico and then gain entry to the United States.

He called a current caravan, which is still hundreds of miles from the US border and dwindling in numbers, an “invasion” and said it would bring hardened criminals to US streets.

Administra­tion officials say that aside from the rhetoric the border really does have a problem, given that anyone who manages to get across can request asylum and subsequent­ly often vanish while their case sits in the court system.

“The vast majority of these applicatio­ns eventually turn out to be non-meritoriou­s,” a senior administra­tion official said, asking not to be identified.

Less than 10 per cent of cases result in asylum being granted, the government says. — AFP

 ??  ?? Migrants, part of a caravan traveling from Central America en route to the United States, wait outside a UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) office during a march demanding buses to take them to the US border, in Mexico City, Mexico . — Reuters photo
Migrants, part of a caravan traveling from Central America en route to the United States, wait outside a UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) office during a march demanding buses to take them to the US border, in Mexico City, Mexico . — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? File combo photo of Nelson and Scott. — AFP photo
File combo photo of Nelson and Scott. — AFP photo

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