Kerry
says U.S. ready to take more refugees
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[September 21, 2015]
By Lesley Wroughton
BERLIN (Reuters) - The United States will
increase the number of refugees it takes in by 15,000 over each of the
next two years, bringing the total to 100,000 by 2017, U.S. Secretary of
State John Kerry said after talks with his German counterpart on Sunday.
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The remarks may show increasing U.S. willingness to help cope with
the mass migration of Syrians although the offer is modest when
compared with the hundreds of thousands that are moving to Europe
and in particular, Germany.
Kerry did not say how many of the additional refugees would be from
Syria but pledged that the United States was ready to help.
"In consultation with Congress, we will continue to explore ways to
increase those figures while maintaining robust security," Kerry
told a news conference after meeting German foreign minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier.
"The need is enormous, but we are determined to answer the call."
Kerry also announced he will hold talks on the sidelines of the U.N.
General Assembly in New York this week on ways to restart
negotiations on a political solution to end Syria's war.
"We have agreed on certain formats and processes by which we should
try and proceed," he said, adding that he would meet with Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad
Javad Zarif to discuss the situation in Syria.
"This will be a very timely meeting in New York and will give us
tremendous opportunity to be able to work together and find some
ways forward."
Kerry's comments on refugees address calls on U.S. President Barack
Obama to help more in the crisis. Obama has said the U.S. will
accept at least 10,000 Syrians over the coming year displaced by the
four-year-old civil war.
His announcement comes ahead of a Sept. 23 emergency summit meeting
of European Union leaders to address the stream of refugees that has
overwhelmed the region.
He said the United States would like to take in more refugees in the
coming year but needed additional funding from Congress to hire more
people to process the refugees.
"We are doing what we know we can manage immediately," he told a
news conference. "As soon as we have the opportunity to try to up
that we will ... welcome more people in these kinds of
circumstances."
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Countries disagree as to who should take responsibility for the
nearly 500,000 people who have crossed the Mediterranean into Europe
this year alone, prompting Hungary's use of water cannon and razor
wire on its border with Serbia.
Many of the same fears shape the debate in Europe as in the United
States, where the number of refugees allowed in slowed sharply after
the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.
Some Republicans have warned that the administration could open the
door to potential militants.
Congressman Bob Goodlatte and Senator Chuck Grassley, Republicans
who head the judiciary committees in the U.S. Senate and House of
Representatives, said in a statement the proposal lacked "a concrete
and foolproof plan to ensure that terrorists won't be able to enter
the country."
Aid groups, meanwhile, have been critical of plans to allow in only
10,000 Syrians, given the large size of the American economy and
population. They have called for ten times as many to be admitted.
Kerry has pushed for renewed efforts to find a political solution to
the crisis and urged Russia and Iran, who back Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad, to convince him to negotiate an end to the war.
(Reporting By Lesley Wroughton; Additional reporting by Jason Lange
in Washington; editing by John O'Donnell and Ruth Pitchford)
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