US contributing millions to help Mexico, Ethiopia
and others become resettlement countries, by Ann Corcoran on 9/18/16
Maybe it would simply help the world if we
told Mexico and Ethiopia to keep their own people at home!
Or, LOL! Maybe
Ethiopia can resettle the excess Mexicans flooding the US border, and Mexico
will welcome Ethiopian refugees that we still take by the thousands!
(Only countries willing to help refugees were permitted to attend Obama’s
summit so Mexico and Ethiopia’s participation strikes me as very funny.)
One of the many
taxpayer-funded goodies Obama will be talking about this week at the United
Nations is our recent gift of $11 million to help launch the Emerging
Resettlement Countries Joint Support Mechanism (ERCM). Presumably this
new bureaucracy (one more UN agency) will be teaching other countries how to
resettle refugees using our successful (ha! ha!) model. Or, is it just
one more way to redistribute American wealth?
Here
is the press release from the State Department that made me laugh (chock full
of their favorite lingo, robust and sustainable got two mentions each)!
Emphasis below is mine:
The United
States is pleased to announce a contribution of $11 million to the
International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to support the Emerging
Resettlement Countries Joint Support Mechanism (ERCM), a platform established
to help countries create robust and sustainable refugee resettlement programs.
On September 20, 2016, leaders from Jordan,
Mexico, Germany, Ethiopia, Sweden, and Canada, as well
as UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, will join President Obama in hosting the
Leaders’ Summit on Refugees on the margins of this year’s UN General Assembly
high-level week. The Summit will bring together governments from around the
world that have made new and significant pledges in 2016 to address the most
urgent needs of refugees and facilitate long-term durable solutions. Among the goals
of the Summit is to double the global number of refugees resettled or admitted
legally to third countries. A significant number of countries have stepped
forward to launch or expand refugee resettlement efforts [Ethiopia?
Mexico?–ed]. It is vital to the success of these efforts that their programs
address the legal, administrative, and social challenges that refugees can
face.
The U.S.
contribution to the ERCM, managed by UNHCR and IOM, will provide both resources
and expertise to assist countries in establishing the legal, institutional, and
community framework necessary to create robust and sustainable resettlement
programs. The ERCM will focus on providing support to newly established resettlement
programs and may potentially support other pathways such as family reunification programs, study
opportunities, and issuance of humanitarian visas. The United States
strongly urges other donors to join in supporting this important mechanism. With full funding,
the ERCM could help as many as 10 countries resettle nearly 30,000 refugees
over the next three years.
Up until very
recently the IOM was a separate NGO, but has recently been incorporated in to
the United Nations
Comments
The least
expensive, least disruptive, least sovereignty threatening, least culture
eroding solution to refugees is to resettle them in their own countries. But that is not Aninsky enough for Obama and
the UN. They are using the refugee scam
to attack the citizens of the targeted countries in Europe and the US and
Western Culture. Agenda 21 requires the dissolution of all current
nation-states.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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