Trump
said at the United Nations last week that “protecting religious
freedom is one of my highest priorities.” But his promise rings
hollow to advocates for persecuted religious minorities seeking a
safe haven in the United States.
The
list of persecuted religious groups whose access to refugee admission
has withered under Trump includes Christians in Iran, Syria,
Pakistan, Myanmar and Sudan, as well as Iraqi Christians and Yazidis
— whose mass slaughter and enslavement by the Islamic State was
labeled “genocide ” by Trump’s State Department in 2017.
Refugees
seeking admission must undergo screenings by eight federal agencies
as part of a process initiated outside the country that can take as
long as two years. Applicants must have experienced persecution on
one of five grounds, religion, race, nationality, political opinions,
or membership in a social group.
With
the administration spotlighting its commitment to international
religious freedom, the cuts to admissions of refugees whose lives can
be threatened because of their faith strikes advocates as
particularly glaring. The 30,000 cap set for this year by Trump’s
administration is the lowest since the modern resettlement program’s
creation in 1980.
Trump’s
administration already has slashed the nation’s refugee admissions
ceiling to a historic low and on Thursday proposed a further cut for
next year, to 18,000 — an 84% drop from the cap proposed during the
last year of Barack Obama’s presidency. The State Department set
aside 5,000 refugee slots for religious minorities.
“For
the United States to cut refugee resettlement to half of what it was
last year is an abrogation of who we are and all that we stand for as
a nation,” said Bishop Michael Rinehart, Lutheran Immigration and
Refugee Service Chairman of the Board. “This decision means that
thousands of people, including those fleeing violence and war, and
those fleeing religious persecution, will continue to be left in
harm’s way.”
Free
Yezidi Foundation executive director Pari Ibrahim, whose nonprofit
group helps raise awareness about Yazidi persecution, pointed to the
stark contrast between the administration’s talk about helping
members of her denomination and its “ridiculous” cuts to refugee
admissions of Iraqi Yazidis: from 434 in fiscal year 2017, the last
year the Obama administration played a role in refugee admissions, to
just 5 in fiscal year 2018. Twenty Iraqi Yazidis gained access to the
refugee program in the fiscal year that ends this week, according to
an Associated Press analysis of State Department data.
“The
genocide is still ongoing, and you wonder to yourself, is it all just
talk,” Ibrahim said, adding that Yazidis “need to get a second
chance in their freedom in their right to believe whatever they want
to believe.”
In
addition to Yazidis in Iraq and Syria, other persecuted religious
minorities whose refugee admissions have dropped by more than half
since the final full year of the Obama administration include
Christians from a half-dozen nations, according to AP’s analysis.
It’s not clear whether the proposed 5,000 set-aside for persecuted
religious minorities would have any significant impact on those
falling refugee admissions numbers.
Family
Research Council President Tony Perkins, a stalwart conservative who
has defended Trump’s immigration agenda as consistent with the
Bible, issued a statement this month in his capacity as chair of the
U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom that called on
“the administration to extend its admirable commitment to advancing
religious freedom to its refugee resettlement policy.”
Nadine
Maenza, vice chair of that commission and a Trump appointee, drew a
direct link between promoting religious freedom worldwide and
accepting persecuted worshippers seeking refugee status.
“It’s
hard for us to go into a country, the U.S. government or the U.S.
Commission on International Religious Freedom ... and talk to
government leaders there and make a case that religious minorities
have value, that they have dignity, they bring really wonderful
things to our society — and then ourselves not be willing to take
one” as a refugee, Maenza said
That
Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo would not view “refugees
as part of a religious freedom agenda, I think it’s disappointing,”
said Jenny Yang, vice president of advocacy and policy at World
Relief, another faith-based group that assists in resettling
refugees.
“The
fact they’re even considering zeroing out a program that has
literally thousands of persecuted Christians waiting to come in,”
Yang added, suggests that “this is a program they don’t value as
much as they could or strategically use as much as they could.”
https://apnews.com/9562626425d74765bf89ff91931de0d0
No comments:
Post a Comment