Miami Herald

Biden to raise refugee admissions cap to 125,000

- BY FELICIA SONMEZ AND SEUNG MIN KIM

The Biden administra­tion is raising the refugee admissions cap for the next fiscal year to 125,000, a reflection of the goal to which the president aspired during the 2020 campaign.

The move comes as the United States is accepting hundreds of refugees from Afghanista­n after the end of U.S. military operations in the country. The administra­tion also cited the expanded resettleme­nt of Central Americans and Myanmar dissidents.

Sen. Richard J. Durbin, D-Ill., the Senate majority whip, welcomed the news.

“I applaud the Biden administra­tion for setting a target of 125,000 refugee admissions in the next fiscal year – a target my colleagues and I have been advocating for since April,” Durbin said in a statement. “And while I’m disappoint­ed in the projected number of refugees to be admitted this fiscal year, I acknowledg­e the challenges the Biden administra­tion inherited with the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program due to the anti-immigrant actions of the previous Administra­tion.”

The 125,000 number has long been the aspiration­al figure that the Biden administra­tion had set for fiscal 2022, which begins Oct. 1.

Earlier this year, President Joe Biden reinforced that goal but cautioned that the number “will still be hard to hit,” attributin­g his conclusion to the challenges of rebuilding a system that President Donald Trump had dismantled.

The latest move comes after Biden in May raised the cap to 62,500 from the record low of 15,000 set by the Trump administra­tion, which he said “did not reflect America’s values as a nation that welcomes and supports refugees.”

According to a report released Monday by the State Department in conjunctio­n with the Department­s of Homeland Security and Health and Human Services, the cap for fiscal 2022 is expected to include 40,000 refugees from Africa, 35,000 from the Near East/South Asia, 15,000 from East Asia, 15,000 from Latin America/the Caribbean, and 10,000 from Europe/ Central Asia.

An additional 10,000 belong to an unallocate­d reserve, according to the report.

“In FY 2022, the Administra­tion plans to increase the USRAP target with a particular focus on several key population­s and programs: expanded resettleme­nt of Central Americans; enhanced access to the USRAP for Afghans at risk due to their affiliatio­n with the United States; increased resettleme­nt of LGBTQI+ refugees; priority access for at-risk Uyghurs, Hong Kong refugees, and Burmese dissidents; and resettleme­nt of Burmese Rohingya,” the report states. The Rohingya are a predominan­tly Muslim minority that faces discrimina­tion in Myanmar, also known as Burma.

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