U.S. officials pledge Biden will raise cap on refugees, but old goal
unlikely
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[April 19, 2021]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. officials
said Sunday that President Joe Biden is committed to raising the cap on
refugee admissions this year, currently set at 15,000, but indicated it
was unlikely he will go as high as the administration's initial goal of
four times that much.
Biden, a Democrat, signed an order on Friday limiting U.S. refugee
admissions this year to the historically low 15,000 cap set under his
predecessor Donald Trump, shelving a plan to raise it to 62,500, and
drawing the ire of refugee advocates and some Democratic lawmakers.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken told ABC's "This Week" in an interview
aired Sunday that Biden will be revisiting the refugee issue over the
coming weeks, but "it's going to be very hard to meet the 62,000 this
fiscal year."
"He is absolutely committed to making sure that America is not only
welcoming to refugees ... but also that we raise the cap. He is
committed to that and he will follow through on that," Jake Sullivan,
Biden's national security adviser, told Fox News Sunday.
As criticism mounted over the initial decision, the White House issued a
statement Friday saying Biden would set a "final, increased refugee cap"
for the remainder of this fiscal year by May 15.
Biden's order to limit admissions to 15,000 was a blow to advocacy
groups that wanted the Democratic president to move swiftly to reverse
the refugee policies of the Republican Trump, who had set the figure as
a way to limit immigration.
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White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan delivers remarks
during a press briefing inside the White House in Washington, U.S.,
February 4, 2021. REUTERS/Tom Brenner/File Photo
The program for admitting refugees is distinct from
the asylum system for migrants. Refugees must be vetted while still
overseas and cleared for entry to the U.S., unlike migrants who
arrive at a U.S. border and then request asylum.
The president's cautious approach appears to have been tied to
concerns over the optics of admitting more refugees at a time of
rising numbers of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border in
recent months.
Sullivan denied that Biden had broken his earlier promise on
refugees. He said the allocation under the existing refugee cap of
15,000 had included "zero people" from Africa, but that Biden had
changed this allocation.
"He is currently allowing refugees to get on planes today," Sullivan
told CNN.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell, Phil Stewart and Sarah Lynch; Editing
by Lisa Shumaker and Nick Zieminski)
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