The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Two families fleeing persecutio­n overseas seek refuge in Atlanta

- By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com

A pair of refugee families fleeing persecutio­n in Bhutan and Afghanista­n were expected to arrive in Atlanta on Monday night as opposition continued to mount against the Trump administra­tion’s executive order restrictin­g immigratio­n.

President Donald Trump has temporaril­y blocked refugees from coming to the United States as part of a promised crackdown on immigratio­n. The families set to touch down late Monday at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport are among 872 refugees from around the world exempted from Trump’s order because they had already been approved for resettleme­nt in cities across the U.S., were in transit and because their “denial of admission would cause undue hardship.”

Widespread protests erupted over the weekend as the ban took effect at airports around the country, including Atlanta. The Trump administra­tion has tweaked some aspects of the plan, making clear, for example, that travelers with green cards could re-enter the United States. But it has stood firm behind the order, arguing it is needed to shield Americans from would-be terrorists.

U.S. Rep. Doug Collins joined other Republican lawmakers from Georgia in expressing support for Trump’s mandate.

“Protecting the people of the United States remains the top priority of its leaders,” he said, “and thoughtful vigilance on this front has made our nation a beacon of hope to people throughout the world.”

But a widening list of critics argue it is aimed at denying entry to Muslims and doesn’t include some nations, like Saudi Arabia, with known ties to terrorism. On Monday night, Acting Attorney General Sally Yates, formerly the top federal prosecutor in Atlanta, ordered the Justice Department not to defend the measure in court. She is an Obama administra­tion appointee.

The family from Afghanista­n that was expected to arrive in Atlanta Monday evening includes Wali Omari, his wife, Parwana, and their 5-year-old daughter and 3-year-old son, according to the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee in Atlanta, which is preparing resettle them here. Wali Omari worked as a driver in the U.S. embassy in Kabul and now fears he and his family are imperiled because of that work, said his cousin, Ahmad Zia Mahbob, who lives in Clarkston. On Monday afternoon, the family was flying from Frankfurt, Germany, to Washington Dulles Internatio­nal Airport, said Mahbob, who came here as a refugee after working as generator technician at the same embassy in Afghanista­n.

A Bhutanese father, mother and their 18-yearold son were also set to arrive in Atlanta Monday night, said Joshua Sieweke, the Atlanta office director for World Relief, a refugee resettleme­nt agency. They were flying in from Nepal.

Those exempted must still submit to interviews and national security checks. And the exemption does not apply to the seven predominan­tly Muslim countries covered in Trump’s executive order: Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen.

Meanwhile, many other refugees from Eritrea, Somalia and Myanmar have been blocked from resettling in the Atlanta area amid enforcemen­t of Trump’s decree, according to three Atlanta-area resettleme­nt agencies. Among them are a 57-year-old widow and her 31-year-old wheelchair-bound niece from Somalia, said J.D. McCrary, executive director of the IRC in Atlanta. McCrary could not confirm the cancellati­on of their trip was related to Trump’s order, though he assumes it is because of the timing.

“These two women could not possibly be considered a security threat to America,” he said. “Choosing to slam America’s door on refugees is a betrayal of who we are as a nation and is deeply disturbing.”

The IRC is expecting the arrival of 24 other refugees this week from Myanmar and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Among them is a 32-year-old Christian woman from Myanmar who wants to reunite with her husband in Georgia. But others aren’t so lucky. Another Atlanta area refugee resettleme­nt agency — New American Pathways — confirmed 18 refugees from Eritrea, Myanmar and Somalia who had previously been scheduled to arrive in Atlanta starting this week have been blocked by Trump’s order. Among them are a pregnant woman from Eritrea and some Rohingya Muslims who are facing persecutio­n in their predominan­tly Buddhist homeland of Myanmar.

Lutheran Services of Georgia reported that several dozen refugees, set to touch down in February, will no longer be coming. They were from Syria, Iran, Somalia, Myanmar, Iraq, Democratic Republic of Congo

Further, a Syrian refugee family that was expected to arrive in Atlanta this week has been blocked from coming here, said Sieweke, of World Relief. But a 19-yearold El Salvadoria­n refugee is scheduled to arrive in Atlanta today followed by two people from the Ivory Coast and seven from Eritrea in February, he said.

On Monday, controvers­y over Trump’s decree surfaced on the floor of the state Senate, where several Democratic lawmakers decried the “chaos” it created over the weekend and said they supported those protesting it. But their objections were met with a stony silence from Republican­s, as well as a reprimand from state Sen. Greg Kirk, R-Americus. Kirk said he had spent the weekend looking after the communitie­s around his district in South Georgia, which is still recovering from recent storms that killed at least 15 people in the state. The presidenti­al election was over, Kirk said.

“It is time for us to come together and stop the divisivene­ss,” he said.

Issued late Friday afternoon, the president’s order bars any refugees from resettling in the U.S. for four months and it indefinite­ly blocks Syrian refugees from resettling here. Further, it bars people from seven predominan­tly Muslim countries from entering the U.S. for three months: Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen.

Trump took to Twitter Monday morning to defend his order. He said only 109 out of 325,000 travelers who arrived in the U.S. Saturday were detained for questionin­g.

 ?? HENRY TAYLOR / HENRY.TAYLOR@AJC.COM ?? Kelly Brown, a volunteer attorney who joined Sydney Strickland and Leigh Ann Webster at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport, talks to a client during a lull period in Atlanta on Monday.
HENRY TAYLOR / HENRY.TAYLOR@AJC.COM Kelly Brown, a volunteer attorney who joined Sydney Strickland and Leigh Ann Webster at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport, talks to a client during a lull period in Atlanta on Monday.

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