Post Tribune (Sunday)

US slams door on Afghans’ hopes

Many in search of temporary entry routinely denied

- By Philip Marcelo and Amy Taxin

BOSTON — Haseena Niazi had pinned her hopes of getting her fiance out of Afghanista­n on a rarely used immigratio­n provision.

The 24-year-old Massachuse­tts resident was almost certain his applicatio­n for humanitari­an parole would get approved by the U.S. government, considerin­g the evidence he provided on the threats from the Taliban he received while working on women’s health issues at a hospital near Kabul.

But last month, the request was summarily denied, leaving the couple reeling after months of anxiety.

“He had everything they wanted,” said Niazi, a green card holder originally from Afghanista­n. “It doesn’t make any sense why they’d reject it. It’s like a bad dream. I still can’t believe it.”

Federal immigratio­n officials have issued denial letters to hundreds of Afghans seeking temporary entry into the country for humanitari­an reasons in recent weeks, to the dismay of Afghans and their supporters. By doing so, immigrant advocates say, the Biden administra­tion has failed to honor its promise to help Afghans who were left behind after the U.S. military withdrew from the country in August and the Taliban took control.

“It was a huge disappoint­ment,” said Caitlin Rowe, a Texas attorney who said she recently received five denials, including one for an Afghan police officer who helped train U.S. troops and was beaten by the Taliban. “These are vulnerable people who genuinely thought there was hope, and I don’t think there was.”

Since the U.S. withdrawal,

U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services has received more than 35,000 applicatio­ns for humanitari­an parole, of which it has denied about 470 and conditiona­lly approved more than 140, Victoria Palmer, an agency spokespers­on, said late last month.

The little-known program, which doesn’t provide a path to lawful permanent residence in the country, typically receives fewer than 2,000 requests annually from all nationalit­ies, of which USCIS approves an average of about 500, she said.

Palmer also stressed humanitari­an parole is generally reserved for extreme emergencie­s and not intended to replace the refugee admissions process, “which is the typical pathway for individual­s outside of the United States who have fled their country of origin and are seeking protection.”

The U.S. government,

meanwhile, continues to help vulnerable Afghans, evacuating more than 900 American citizens and residents and another 2,200 Afghans since the military withdrawal. The state department said it expects to help resettle as many as 95,000 people from Afghanista­n this fiscal year, a process that includes rigorous background checks and vaccinatio­ns.

Many of them, however, had been whisked out of Afghanista­n before the U.S. left. Now, USCIS is tasked with this new wave of humanitari­an parole applicatio­ns and has ramped up staffing to consider them.

The agency said in a statement that requests are reviewed on an individual basis, with considerat­ion given to immediate relatives of Americans and Afghans airlifted out.

And while USCIS stressed that parole shouldn’t replace refugee processing, immigrant advocates argue

that isn’t a viable option for Afghans stuck in their country due to a disability or hiding from the Taliban. Even those able to get out of Afghanista­n, they say, may be forced to wait years in refugee camps, which isn’t something many can afford to do.

Mohammad, who asked that his last name not be used out of fear for his family’s safety, said his older brother, who used to work for internatio­nal organizati­ons, is among them. He has been in hiding since the Taliban came looking for him following the U.S. withdrawal, Mohammad said.

On a recent visit to the family home, Taliban members took his younger brother instead and held him more than a week for ransom, he said. Now, Mohammad, a former translator for U.S. troops in Afghanista­n who lives in California with a special immigratio­n status, is seeking parole for this brother,

too. He hopes a conditiona­l approval letter can get them a spot on one of the U.S. evacuation flights still running out of the country.

“I can provide him housing. I can provide him everything,” he said.

Immigrant advocates began filing humanitari­an parole applicatio­ns for Afghans in August in a lastditch effort to get them on U.S. evacuation flights out of the country before the withdrawal.

In some cases, it worked, and word spread among immigratio­n attorneys that parole, while typically used in extreme emergencie­s, might be a way out, said Kyra Lilien, director of immigratio­n legal services at Jewish Family & Community Services in California’s East Bay.

Soon, attorneys began filing thousands of parole applicatio­ns for Afghans.

When the U.S. immigratio­n agency created a website specifical­ly to address these applicatio­ns, Lilien said she thought it was a sign of hope. By November, however, the agency had posted a list of narrow criteria for Afghan applicants and held a webinar telling attorneys that parole is typically granted only if there’s evidence someone faces “imminent severe harm.”

A few weeks later, the denial letters began arriving. Lilien has received more than a dozen but no approvals.

Wogai Mohmand, an attorney who helps lead the Afghan-focused Project ANAR, said that the group has filed thousands of applicatio­ns and that since the U.S. troop withdrawal, has seen only denials.

In Massachuse­tts, the Internatio­nal Institute of New England is holding off filing new applicatio­ns until it hears on those that are pending after receiving a flurry of denials.

Chiara St. Pierre, an attorney for the refugee resettleme­nt agency, said she feels clients like Niazi are facing an “unwinnable” battle.

For Niazi’s fiance, they had provided copies of written threats sent to the hospital where he works as a medical technician and threatenin­g text messages he said came from Taliban members, she said. It wasn’t enough.

A redacted copy of the denial letter provided by St. Pierre lists the USCIS criteria released in November but doesn’t specify why the agency rejected the applicatio­n, which had been filed in August.

For now, Niazi says her fiance is far from Kabul as they weigh their options. They could wait until Niazi becomes an American citizen so she can try to bring him here on a fiance visa, but that would take years.

“He can’t wait that long. It’s a miracle every day that he’s alive,” Niazi said. “I’m feeling like every door is closing in on him.”

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA/AP ?? Haseena Niazi, above, saw her fiance’s humanitari­an parole applicatio­n denied last month by the U.S.
CHARLES KRUPA/AP Haseena Niazi, above, saw her fiance’s humanitari­an parole applicatio­n denied last month by the U.S.

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