U.N.
sending thousands of Muslims to America Resettlement
will cost billions of dollars, by Leo Hohmann 12/11/14
The federal government is preparing for another “surge” in
refugees and this time they won’t be coming illegally from Central America.
The U.S. State Department announced this week that the
first major contingent of Syrian refugees, 9,000 of them, have been
hand-selected by the United Nations for resettlement into communities across
the United States.
The announcement came Tuesday
on the State Department’s website. WND
reported in September that Syrians would make up the next
big wave of Muslim refugees coming to the U.S., as resettlement agencies were
lobbying for the U.S. to accept at least 75,000 Syrian refugees over the next
five years.
Until now, the U.S. had accepted only 300 of the more than
3.2 million refugees created by the Syrian civil war in which ISIS, El Nusra
and other Sunni Muslim jihadist rebels are locked in a protracted battle with
the Shiite regime of Bashar al-Assad.
But the U.S. government has been the most active of all
nations in accepting Islamic refugees from other war-torn countries, such as
Iraq, Somalia and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Now, the Syrians will be added to the mix. They are cleared
for refugee status by the U.N. high commissioner on refugees (UNHCR), who
assigns them to various countries. Once granted refugee status by the U.N. they
are screened by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security for any ties to
terrorist organizations.
The State Department announcement makes it clear that the
9,000 refugees represent just the beginning of an extended program to accept
more Syrians.
“The United States accepts the majority of all UNHCR
referrals from around the world. Last year, we reached our goal of resettling
nearly 70,000 refugees from nearly 70 countries. And we plan to lead in
resettling Syrians as well,” the statement reads. “We are reviewing some 9,000
recent UNHCR referrals from Syria. We are receiving roughly a thousand new ones
each month, and we expect admissions from Syria to surge in 2015 and beyond.”
The
United States, with its commitment to accepting 70,000 displaced people a year,
absorbs more refugees than all other countries combined. This number is
understated, however, as once refugees get to the United States they are placed
on a fast track to citizenship and are able to get their extended families to
join them in the states under the government’s Refuge Family Reunification
program.
The refugees have been placed in
more than 100 communities across 49 states.
Only Wyoming does not have a refugee resettlement program.
Despite the large numbers, the U.S.
has come under criticism from aid groups for its pace in taking in refugees
from the Syrian war, which is by far the largest refugee crisis of recent
years, reported Ann Corcoran of Refugee Resettlement
Watch.
U.S. officials say the resettlement program has moved slowly
because the United Nations refugee agency, which they look to for referrals,
didn’t begin making recommendations until late last year. And the United States
takes 18 to 24 months on average to carefully vet each applicant to make sure
he or she poses no security risk.
Muslim countries in the Middle East have so far not stepped
up to permanently take in their Islamic brothers and sisters although the
temporary refugee camps to which the Syrians have fled are in Jordan, Turkey
and Lebanon.
The State Department announcement was careful to explain
that the U.S. will take in only those Syrians who are “persecuted by their
government.” Christians in Syria are being killed by ISIS and other Muslim
rebels, not by “their government,” but the Sunni Muslims are being killed by
the Shiite-led government. It also would not take 18 to 24 months to “vet”
Christian refugees for security purposes.
“There is no doubt the majority of Syrians to be admitted to
the U.S. will be Muslims because it would be unlikely there would be a
‘security risk’ with the Christians,” according to Corcoran.
She said screening has become more rigorous since 2009, when
authorities were alarmed to discover that two members of al-Qaeda had entered
the country posing as Iraqi refugees. That concern has been sharpened by
worries that fighters from the Islamic State militant group may try to enter
the United States.
The United States has imported more
than 2 million Muslim refugees since 1992,
WND previously reported. The authority for the resettlement program is the
Refugee Act of 1980, signed into law by President Jimmy Carter.
On Tuesday, Anne C. Richard, assistant secretary of state
for population, refugees and migration, said at a U.N. meeting in Geneva that the
Obama administration was going to step up its efforts because the refugee
outflow had swelled “to a mass exodus.”
At the Geneva meeting, 28 countries agreed to take in 66,000
refugees. But that was far short of the 300,000 Syrians that officials at the U.N.
refugee agency believe need to be permanently resettled.
Corcoran alerted readers of her blog
who live in cities already stocked with large numbers of refugees that they
should contact their members of Congress if they have concerns about getting
new shipments of displaced persons. The added burden that refugees put on
social services has prompted several mayors in Massachusetts and New Hampshire
to request that the federal government shut off the refugee spigot, as
reported recently by WND. The mayor of
Athens, Georgia, Nancy Denson, has requested that her city not be added to the
list of cities accepting refugees until a full accounting of the costs can be
tabulated. Richard, in her announcement, said resettlement agencies and
“charities” are already mobilizing to help the soon arrival of new Syrian
refugees.
“Like most other refugees resettled in the United States,
they will get help from the International Organization for Migration with
medical exams and transportation to the United States. Once they arrive,
networks of resettlement agencies, charities, churches, civic organizations and
local volunteers will welcome them. These groups work in 180 communities across
the country and make sure refugees have homes, furniture, clothes, English
classes, job training, health care and help enrolling their children in school.
They are now preparing key contacts in American communities to welcome
Syrians.”
What Richard fails to mention is that most of the
resettlement work done by the above network of agencies is taxpayer funded
through various grants distributed by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services’ Refugee Resettlement Program.
The nine contractors that lobbied for more Syrian refugees
are:
• Church World Service (CWS)
• Ethiopian Community Development Council (ECDC)
• Episcopal Migration Ministries (EMM)
• Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS)
• International Rescue Committee (IRC)
• U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI)
• Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services (LIRS)
• U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB)
• World Relief Corp. (WR)
• Church World Service (CWS)
• Ethiopian Community Development Council (ECDC)
• Episcopal Migration Ministries (EMM)
• Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS)
• International Rescue Committee (IRC)
• U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI)
• Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services (LIRS)
• U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB)
• World Relief Corp. (WR)
The cost of resettling 70,000
refugees comes to just over $1 billion per year to the U.S. government,
according to a
State Department report for fiscal 2015.
This includes running the program and issuing federal grants to the nine
resettlement agencies. The $1 billion figure does not include the cost of the
unaccompanied alien children program, supplying food stamps, subsidized
housing, interpreters, Medicaid, WIC, temporary assistance to needy families
(TANF) and educating the children, much of which falls to states and
localities.
Corcoran estimates that, taken in total, the cost of the
U.S. refugee resettlement program could run as high as $10 billion per year.
“Those numbers are just not obtainable,” she said.
That also does not include the
potential cost of security risks. WND
reported in September that 22
Somali-Americans brought in through the refugee program have been documented by
the FBI to have left the country to fight for Al-Shabab, a terrorist
organization in Somalia, while several others have gone to fight for the Islamic
State, also called ISIS, in Syria. Dozens of others have been prosecuted for
sending money or other material support to terrorist organizations.
Several of the resettlement
agencies, such
as the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops,
have posted statements on their websites welcoming President Obama’s recent
executive action granting amnesty to up to 5 million illegal aliens. The
religious “charities” conduct their refugee resettlement work with government
grants accounting for 90 to 98 percent of their budgets, as previously reported
by WND.
Source:
http://www.wnd.com/2014/12/u-n-sending-thousands-of-muslims-to-america/
No comments:
Post a Comment