Reuters
January 14, 2016
Refugee
advocates said on Thursday the Obama administration is sending mixed
signals to Central American migrants by deporting families who have fled
to the United States
while increasing resources in the crime-ridden region for asylum
seekers.
Secretary
of State John Kerry announced on Wednesday that the United States would
work with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to expand
opportunities for
people from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras to apply for refugee
status before coming to the United States.
The
U.S. Department of Homeland Security recently conducted raids in the
United States on Central American families who had fled the region in an
effort to deter others
from doing the same.
"That
frankly leaves us scratching our heads and leaves us wondering how the
administration could be talking about the refugee resettlement issue in
such different terms,"
said Wendy Young, president of Kids in Need of Defense, an advocacy
organization for children who enter the U.S. immigration system alone.
Young said the families were not given due process before being deported.
The
question of what claim Central Americans fleeing violence have to
refugee status in the United States comes amid a polarized national
debate about the U.S. immigration
system.
Some
congressional Republicans have said migrants, including refugees from
Central America and the Middle East, could threaten public health and
national security. More
than 140 Democrats in the U.S. House wrote a letter to President Barack
Obama condemning the deportation raids.
Refugee
and immigration advocates said the administration's plan to deport
Central Americans from the United States while increasing opportunities
for them to seek asylum
from their own countries wrongfully assumes that those asking for
asylum at the border are a threat.
The
asylum application process, which can take two years, is unfeasible for
families needing to flee violence quickly, said Jen Smyers, associate
director of immigration
and refugee policy at Church World Service.
Michelle
Brané, director of migrant rights and justice at the Women's Refugee
Commission, said the administration's "border enforcement approach to
this issue has been
a mistake from the beginning."
Young
said the administration wanted to counter the perception that border is
out of control but "I think what they're going to find out is that the
most dangerous political
calculation is that the immigrant rights community ... are now all
unifying and speaking out in strong opposition to this new policy."
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