From News Nation:
“Thousands more Afghans can
resettle in US as refugees, says State Department”
Thousands more Afghans who may be
targets of Taliban violence due to their U.S. affiliations will have the
opportunity to resettle as refugees in the United States under a new program
announced by the State Department on Monday. Reuters exclusively reported on
plans to set up the “Priority Two” refugee program, covering Afghans who worked
for U.S.-funded projects and for U.S.-based non-government bodies and media
outlets, earlier on Monday. “In light of increased levels of Taliban violence,
the U.S. government is working to provide certain Afghans, including those who
worked with the United States, the opportunity for refugee resettlement to the
United States,” the State Department said in the announcement. “This
designation expands the opportunity to permanently resettle in the United
States to many thousands of Afghans and their immediate family members who may
be at risk.”
The announcement of the program
comes as fighting surges in Afghanistan ahead of the formal completion of the
U.S. troop withdrawal at the end of this month, with the Taliban pushing to
capture key provincial capitals. President Joe Biden has faced pressure from
lawmakers and advocacy groups to aid Afghans at risk of Taliban retaliation
because of their association with the United States during the 20-year war. Those
who worked as employees of contractors, locally employed staff and interpreters
and translators for the U.S. government or armed forces are eligible for the
new designation, as well as Afghans employed by a U.S.-based media organization
or non-governmental organization (NGO), the State Department said. Secretary of
State Antony Blinken will deliver remarks on the program at 2 p.m. EST, the
department said.
The new program for Afghans
requires applicants to be referred by a U.S. agency or by the senior-most U.S.
citizen employee of an NGO or media organization headquartered in the United
States. Once they have applied, they will be contacted by email to let them
know they are in the system and will then have to make their own way out of
Afghanistan to a third country, a senior State Department official said. The
process from that point involves security screening and can take from 12 to 14
months, said the official, who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity. “We’ve
already been in discussion with neighboring countries, as well as (the U.N.
refugee agency), to be prepared for potential outflows,” said another official
who briefed reporters, adding that it was important that Pakistan’s borders
with Afghanistan remained open, while others might travel to Turkey via Iran. That
requirement differs from an existing refugee program for Iraqis, which allows
Iraqis to apply directly but has been indefinitely suspended while U.S.
officials pursue a sweeping fraud investigation. The Priority Two program
applies to Afghans do not qualify for the Special Immigration Visa (SIV)
program that covers interpreters and others who worked for the U.S. government,
and their families.
About 200 SIV applicants whose
visas are in the final stages of processing and family members flew into the
United States last week at the start of an evacuation effort dubbed “Operation
Allies Refuge” that could include as many as 50,000 people or more. A second
plane carrying several hundred more Afghan SIV applicants arrived overnight in
the United States and they will join the first arrivals at Fort Lee, Virginia,
a U.S. official said on Monday.
^ The expansion of the program to
include the Afghanis who worked for any International Group or Organization is
the right thing to do. We may not see the same scenes that we did when Saigon
fell to the North Vietnamese Communists in April 1975, but we are already
seeing the massacre of Afghanis by the Taliban and that will only increase when
the Taliban re-take the whole country (when not if.) ^
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