Los Angeles Times

White House order aims to stem tide at the border

Citizens of Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador can now apply from their home countries for refugee status to enter the U. S.

- By Brian Bennett brian. bennett@ latimes. com

WASHINGTON — In an effort to discourage thousands of unaccompan­ied children from trying to enter the U. S. illegally, President Obama has instructed immigratio­n officials to allow citizens of Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador to apply for refugee status in their home countries for the first time.

The order, contained in a White House memo to the State Department, did not say how many refugee applicatio­ns should be approved. But the program is unlikely to stem the flood of unaccompan­ied minors that began pouring across the Southwest border last spring.

The same memo capped the total number of refugees the administra­tion will admit fromall of Latin America and the Caribbean at 4,000 in the fiscal year that began this week, down from5,000 last year.

Under the new plan, the State Department will begin accepting refugee applicatio­ns at U. S. embassies in Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador by the end of December, according to spokes woman Jen Psaki.

“We are establishi­ng in- country refugee processing to provide a safe, legal and orderly alternativ­e to the dangerous journey that children are currently undertakin­g to join relatives in the U. S.,” Katherine Vargas, a White House spokeswoma­n, said in a statement.

Vargas added that officials at the State and Homeland Security department­s were still deciding exactly who would qualify for the refugee program. Immigratio­n rights advocates hope targets of gang violence or sexual abuse may qualify.

About 66,000 unaccompan­ied children were apprehende­d on the Southwest border in the last fiscal year, twice as many as the previous year. Many said they were fleeing an onslaught of drug violence and crime back home.

The surge sparked alarm in many border towns, overwhelme­d social service agencies and forced the Obama administra­tion to recalibrat­e its plans for immigratio­n reform.

Border Patrol stations in the Rio GrandeVall­ey ofTexas, where most of the Central American children crossed the border, have struggled to care for the minors before they are handedover tosocial serviceage­ncies. Most eventually are placed with relatives in theU. S. while they await immigratio­n hearings in court.

The influx has waned in the last three months, a change officials attribute to public service announceme­nts in Central America warning of the dangers of the journey through Mexico, and blistering summer temperatur­es in the desert.

Border officials are bracing for another wave of children as the weather cools.

Immigratio­n rights advocates criticized the expanded refugee process as inadequate.

“We are concerned that the scope of this program is so small, it really won’t address the magnitude of the problem,” Gregory Chen, director of advocacy for the American Immigratio­n Lawyers Assn., said in an interview.

“It’s like putting out a job announceme­nt but not having any jobs that can be filled,” Chen said.

Until now, the only people who could apply directly for U. S. refugee status from overseas were Cuban dissidents, persecuted religious minorities in Eurasia and the Baltics with close family ties in the U. S., and Iraqi citizens who worked for the U. S. government, U. S. media or U. S. nongovernm­ental organizati­ons after the 2003 American- led invasion.

People who are still overseas also may be designated as refugees by the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees and be admitted to the United States.

But in most cases, foreign nationals must arrive on American soil before they can seek asylum on religious or political grounds, or because they faced violence for being a member of a persecuted social group.

In some cases, women who have been victims of domestic abuse and youths who have received death threats for refusing to join a gang have qualified for asylum, even if they applied fromoutsid­e the country.

 ?? Michael Robinson Chavez
Los Angeles Times ?? CENTRAL AMERICANS at a train yard in Arriaga in southern Mexico in July. President Obama capped the number of refugees to be accepted from Latin America and the Caribbean at 4,000 — down from 5,000.
Michael Robinson Chavez Los Angeles Times CENTRAL AMERICANS at a train yard in Arriaga in southern Mexico in July. President Obama capped the number of refugees to be accepted from Latin America and the Caribbean at 4,000 — down from 5,000.
 ?? Rick Loomis
Los Angeles Times ?? DETAINEES are processed at Texas’ McAllen Border Patrol Station. Border officials expect a new surge in crossings as the weather cools.
Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times DETAINEES are processed at Texas’ McAllen Border Patrol Station. Border officials expect a new surge in crossings as the weather cools.

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