Top U.S. diplomat for refugees to leave
post
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[January 15, 2018]
By Yeganeh Torbati
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. diplomat in
charge of refugee issues plans to leave his post within days, becoming
the third senior U.S. official to depart or be re-assigned from refugee
work in recent weeks.
Simon Henshaw, the acting assistant secretary of the State Department's
Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration, told colleagues in the
refugee sector in an e-mail seen by Reuters that he will be leaving the
bureau at the end of next week.
In an interview on Saturday evening, Henshaw told Reuters he was leaving
his position in a routine professional move unrelated to the Trump
administration's policies, which have curtailed refugee admissions. A
State Department spokeswoman also said Henshaw's move was routine.
Henshaw said his post at the Population, Refugees and Migration bureau
had been his longest assignment in his 33-year tenure as a career
foreign service officer.
"It very honestly had to do with the fact that I'd felt I'd spent enough
time," Henshaw told Reuters. "I'm used to moving on every two or three
years."
Prior to being named acting assistant secretary at the start of the
Trump administration, he served as the principal deputy assistant
secretary since July 2013.
The bureau will be run from Jan. 22 onward by Carol O'Connell, the
deputy assistant secretary of state for African affairs, according to
her State Department biography.
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"In a world where the number of refugees and displaced persons
continues to rise, I think we should all be proud (of) the good that
we have done and the help that we have provided to so many," Henshaw
wrote in the Saturday e-mail.
Henshaw is the latest senior U.S. official working on refugee issues
to leave a job or be sidelined as the Trump administration reshapes
U.S. refugee admissions.
Since taking office last year, President Donald Trump has slashed
the number of refugees allowed into the country, paused the refugee
program entirely for four months, instituted stricter vetting
requirements and quit negotiations on a voluntary pact to deal with
global migration.
On Tuesday, Reuters reported that Lawrence Bartlett, previously the
head of the refugee admissions office at the State Department, had
been given a temporary re-assignment in the State Department office
handling Freedom of Information Act requests.
Earlier this month, Barbara Strack, chief of the Refugee Affairs
Division at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, under the
Department of Homeland Security, said she would retire in January.
(Reporting by Yeganeh Torbati; Editing by Yara Bayoumy and Will
Dunham)
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