The National - News

White House cuts refugee intake to lowest in 36 years

- JOYCE KARAM

The Trump administra­tion has cut the number of refugees to be admitted to the United States by more than half from last year, limiting it to 17,500 people for the Middle East and South Asia regions.

The administra­tion, four days following its travel ban, has notified congress that it will accept 45,000 refugees in total in 2018. That is the lowest level reported in 36 years, a drop from last year’s 110,000 cap set by the Barack Obama administra­tion.

US officials said that Congress has been notified by secretary of state Rex Tillerson of the refugee cap and expected it to be made official in the next few days.

By region, Africa will have the largest allocation with 19,000 admissions; the Near East and South Asia will have 17,500 slots.

The remaining 8,500 admissions will be allocated to East Asia, 5,000; Europe and Central Asia, 2,000 and Latin America and the Caribbean, 1,500.

The 17,500 figure for the Near East and South Asia is unpreceden­ted, given the high flow of refugees from Syria, Iraq, Yemen and more recently Myanmar. “The security and safety of the American people is our chief concern,” said one US official.

The administra­tion is also putting in place stronger and more enhanced vetting procedures. “The number we process will depend on our ability to process, new vetting requiremen­ts that we’re putting out, [and the] Department of Homeland Security’s interviewi­ng capacity, especially taking into account their need to tackle … domestic asylum,” said a US official.

The cap is expected to be approved on Sunday and to come into effect on October 18, along with the new travel ban.

The decision follows a split within the administra­tion on the cap, with officials from state and defence department­s recommendi­ng a higher admission rate of 55,000 while the White House and immigratio­n hawks such as Stephen Miller insisted on a lower ceiling.

The UN refugee agency UNHCR put the number of refugees this year at an all time high, with 22.5 million worldwide coming mostly from Syria, Afghanista­n and South Sudan.

 ??  ?? US president Donald Trump’s officials say the ‘security and safety of the American people is our chief concern’ AFP
US president Donald Trump’s officials say the ‘security and safety of the American people is our chief concern’ AFP

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