JTA
- 01.11.2002
The
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
Refugees
Still Stuck in Europe, Although U.S. Lifted Moratorium
By
Sharon Samber
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 (JTA) — New security regulations imposed after
Sept. 11 could keep hundreds of Jewish refugees stranded in Europe for
months.
Many of the refugees already have been waiting in Moscow and Vienna
for entry into the United States.
After the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, all refugee
interviews and processing stopped because of security issues. Processing
and admissions have started up again, but at a very slow pace, activists
say.
The cessation — the first in U.S. history — was part of the
United States´ general re-evaluation of immigration policies after
Sept. 11.
While the moratorium was still in place, Leonard Glickman, president
of the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, called it "an
overreaction" from the federal government.
The annual review of how many refugees will be admitted this year was
completed on Nov. 21 and approved by President Bush, two months later
than normal.
But there was no movement on the refugees until December, when new
security rules were finalized.
As a result, only 61 HIAS-sponsored refugees were admitted to the
United States in the last three months of 2001. By comparison, 1,995
HIAS-sponsored refugees were admitted during the same period in 2000.
"We´re waiting for the U.S. system to get unstuck," said
Gideon Aronoff, Washington representative for HIAS.
In November, 470 people in Moscow and 119 refugees in Vienna who had
been approved for admission to the United States were awaiting the
lifting of the moratorium, according to HIAS.
In addition, the cases of more than 200 Jewish refugees who had yet
to be approved for admission were pending in Vienna.
Jewish leaders and heads of other refugee organizations have met with
White House officials and State Department officials several times
recently to press for a speedy admittance of the refugees.
The Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration at the State
Department says it is moving as quickly as possible given the new
security procedures.
Airplane flights of refugees, which in the past have held hundreds of
people, now are limited to 30 passengers. New arrivals are fingerprinted
at their point of entry and name checks are performed against the
databases of various intelligence community and law enforcement
agencies.
The new security procedures may be changed in the future, but a State
Department official would say only that the procedures are under
evaluation.