USA TODAY International Edition

ADMINISTRA­TION TO ALLOW IN 872 REFUGEES

1,060 green- card holders granted waivers

- Alan Gomez @ alangomez USA TODAY

The Department of Homeland Security said Tuesday it will allow 872 refugees to enter the country after they were initially barred from flying to the U. S. under President Trump’s executive order on immigratio­n.

Homeland Security began detaining immigrants who arrived at U. S. airports immediatel­y after Trump signed his order Friday evening. The order temporaril­y suspended the U. S. refugee program and barred entry to most people coming from seven majority Muslim countries — Libya, Iran, Iraq, Somalia, Syria, Sudan and Yemen.

By Saturday, the Department of Homeland Security ( DHS) said it was detaining 109 people affected by the ban. DHS officials say all those people were cleared by Sunday night. But civil rights groups and immigratio­n advocates say people remained in custody at airports through Monday.

On Tuesday, Kevin McAleenan, acting commission­er of U. S. Customs and Border Protection ( CBP), said more than 500,000 foreigners flew into the country in the 72 hours following Trump’s order. He said CBP agents granted waivers to 1,060 green- card holders from the countries affected by Trump’s order.

McAleenan said 75 waivers were granted to other visa holders, including people who had special visas intended for military translator­s. But he said 721 travelers were stopped from boarding planes headed for the U. S.

McAleenan and Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly insisted the department was allowed to review drafts of Trump’s order ahead of time.

Kelly denied reports of “chaos” at U. S. airports, arguing that things were running smoothly.

He added that the executive order “is not a ban on Muslims.”

 ?? SAUL LOEB, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Demonstrat­ors protest President Trump’s ban of travelers from seven countries in a rally outside the Supreme Court.
SAUL LOEB, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Demonstrat­ors protest President Trump’s ban of travelers from seven countries in a rally outside the Supreme Court.

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