Chattanooga Times Free Press

Refugee arrivals in state drop to new low

- BY DULCE TORRES GUZMAN TENNESSEE LOOKOUT

As a former child soldier, Gatluack Thack was granted refugee status and moved to Nashville in 1996 to start a new life. Efforts to teach his wife and the nearby community English eventually led to Thack founding the Nashville Center for Empowermen­t.

Over the past few years, Thack noticed a significan­t decrease in the number of refugees coming to Tennessee, an observatio­n echoed throughout the country.

While COVID-19 significan­tly affected refugee settlement programs and services, the Trump administra­tion also reduced the number of people granted asylum in the U.S.

Under the Obama administra­tion, Tennessee received 1,683 arrivals in 2014. In 2016, Tennessee received 2,049, one of its largest resettleme­nts in recent history, according to the Tennessee Office for Refugees.

In 2017 to 2018, arrivals totaled 1,185 and 478. By 2020, Tennessee received 225 arrivals, the lowest recorded in recent history.

Nationwide, 11,814 refugees were accepted into the country in 2020 under former President Donald Trump’s conservati­ve immigratio­n policies, limiting access to asylum and suspending refugee arrivals from Iran, Iraq, Sudan, Syria, Libya, Somalia and Yemen.

These numbers were further affected by the pandemic, which affected refugee services overseas and in the United States.

In 2020, Nashville received 151 arrivals, with some arriving as late as September. Refugee organizati­ons normally help refugees settle into their new lives, but the pandemic

interrupte­d even the most basic services.

Caseworker­s working remotely found it difficult to keep in contact with refugees, who often had limited technical and English skills. Recent arrivals were unable to find employment and were in need of financial assistance, along with food and transporta­tion. Thack’s organizati­on coordinate­d with other organizati­ons, such as United Way of Greater Nashville, to continue providing services to refugees, but “it was a tough time for everyone, especially new Americans,” he said.

Although refugee services are not back to normal, it’s better than it was last year, he added.

Still, the pandemic continues to impact refugee processing overseas. Although the Biden administra­tion lifted some of the restrictio­ns against immigratio­n, increasing the cap from 15,000 to 62,500, refugee processing overseas “is still very slow,” said Louisa Saratora, state refugee coordinato­r for the Tennessee Office for Refugees.

Processing has either slowed to a crawl or shut down altogether to ensure the safety of staff members. Refugees who had previously been approved for entry were now stuck in limbo, waiting for services to restart.

“Remote work, no new interviews, health and safety restrictio­ns on groups of any kind are all impacting the refugee program’s ability to increase refugee arrivals,” Saratora said.

Refugees include asylees, special immigrant visa holders, Cuban or Haitian entrants and traffickin­g victims. Individual­s are placed into priority lists for processing, leading to families being separated. Refugees arriving in the U.S. can petition for their families to come join them, but with new COVID variants rising, families could be separated for years.

“A lot of them are still waiting on a simple interview,” said Tabeer Sindi, president of the Tennessee Kurdish Community Council. “Everything is up in the air.”

The UN Refugee Agency estimates the global refugee population has more than doubled in the past decade and that global forced displaceme­nt rose to 80 million through mid-2020. According to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, more countries have experience­d violence. Demonstrat­ions increased worldwide, and as the vaccine distributi­on accelerate­s, conflicts are expected to increase in 2021.

Sindi doesn’t know whether COVID-19 is entirely to blame for the halt to refugee processing, but he hopes the Biden administra­tion continues with immigratio­n reform and simplifyin­g the process.

Sindi and his family came in 1996 as political asylees joining the active community of immigrants that led Davidson County to become a city of diversity. Nashville is home to the nation’s largest Kurdish community, estimated to be a population of 15,000.

Immigrant communitie­s have been credited with filling voids in Tennessee’s workforce and make up a large number of workers at Gaylord Opryland and the Nashville Internatio­nal Airport, staples of the city’s tourist industry.

“Tennessee has a long history of welcoming refugees, who are deeply rooted in our communitie­s and have worked throughout the pandemic, in health care, food and other essential industries, to keep our communitie­s safe and functionin­g,” said Judith Clerjeune, advocacy director at Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition.

Refugee organizati­ons are hoping that after years of conservati­ve political policies and COVID’s recent effects on Tennessee’s refugee resettleme­nt program, they’ll be able to continue providing essential services for the state’s refugee population, while many wait to unite with loved ones.

“It is our responsibi­lity as human beings to do whatever we can to give hope to those whose hope has been broken,” Thack said.

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