Iraqi refugees: we hear America stinks, send us to Europe!

I came across this lengthy and very informative article days ago, but only now am finding time to post it.   From The National in Abu Dhabi, it was published last week.  It begins with the tale of an Iraqi middle-aged woman granted refugee status by the UN and assigned to go to the US.   She never showed up for her flight.

When the 4am flight to Budapest left Damascus on April 8, a seat on board was reserved for a 50-year-old Iraqi widow, one from hundreds of thousands of waiting refugees given the chance for a new life in the United States.

Salwar Alwan was to land in Hungary, sit out a few hours at the airport and then make the early afternoon Delta Air Lines flight to New York, arriving in her new country just before 5pm. From there, she would go down to Arizona, where a house was waiting for her new beginning.

She had spent weeks preparing for the trip; her bags were packed, her paperwork was in order. She had put aside enough money for the taxi to the airport. But at 1.30am that Wednesday she had not left the house. An hour and a half later there was a phone call from the refugee workers handling her case, telling her to come quickly, explaining that she could not afford to miss the flight. She did not move. 

“Right up until the last minute I was planning to go to,” she said. “They called at 3am and told me to hurry, they told me to hurry, that I must hurry. I told them no, I wouldn’t go. I made the decision.”

When Ms Alwan fled Iraq in 2003, just after her husband was kidnapped – she saw him for the last time, she said, blindfolded, handcuffed and led away by masked gunmen – it was her first trip outside the country. She had lived her entire life in Nasariyah, in southern Iraq, and had never learnt to read or write. She knew little of the outside world.

The day before her flight to the United States Ms Alwan talked to some other Iraqi refugees, better educated than she, and what they had said terrified her.

One thing that scared her—black people in America!  But, that (racist Iraqis) can’t be because we know minorities aren’t racist toward other minorities.  It’s only majority populations of white people that are racists, or at least that is the mantra.

“They told me that if I went to America there would be black people in Arizona and they’d kidnap me or kill me or rape me. They said there would be medical students who would trick me and give me money and then use me for experiments. They said I’d be taken to the zoo and fed to the animals.

According to a refugee resettlement agency employee in Rhode Island, unrealistic expectations abound.

Few Iraqis waiting for resettlement – the golden ticket out of misery they all dream of – have a real idea of what waits for them if they are lucky enough to be taken in by the United States, Europe or Australia. The majority fall into one of two groups: those who think all of their problems will immediately evaporate or, increasingly, those who fear they will not cope with the hard-edged cut and thrust of life in modern, recession-hit America if they are sent there.

“I don’t know what the refugees are told in Syria, but they are always confused when they get here,” said Bahar Sadr, the programme manager at the International Institute of Rhode Island, a refugee transition centre in Providence, Rhode Island, on the east coast.

“They generally think they’ll be handed a large sum of money when they land, whereas in fact they arrive immediately in debt because they have to pay back the airfare for their flight here.

A couple of Iraqis resettled in Rhode Island couldn’t take being at the bottom rungs of society here, so they went back to the “dangerous” Middle East.   I think we need to start keeping track of how many Iraqis go back (probably without even paying back their airfare which must really tick off the refugee agencies that get a kickback from taxpayer funded airfares).

Word is spreading and Iraqis are praying for an assignment to Europe, where the welfare is better.

Word of the unexpectedly difficult lives newly arrived Iraqis find in the United States has started to spread back to the refugee population of more than one million in Syria, Jordan and Turkey. Families and friends remain in close touch and there is a growing consensus among the waiting refugee population – pray that you get resettlement in Europe, where state assistance is more generous.

“I don’t know about Europe, but America is all about competition. If you don’t compete, you get trampled on,” Mr Sadr said.

Well, Mr. Sadr, the way things are going with the Obama Administration it won’t be long now before that hallmark of American greatness—competition—will be annihilated.   People will be able to sit around, doing nothing, and collect big fat welfare payments extracted from the evil rich—right?  Well, at least until the geese laying the golden eggs are dead.

Just please send us to Europe where we hear we will be cared for from cradle to grave.

“We want to go to Europe, not America,” said Abdul Salam Shakir, a father of three sons, the youngest two of whom, 15-year-old Harath and seven-year old Mohammad, have Down syndrome and require constant care. The family fled Iraq in the winter of 2006, when the sectarian war was at its peak. They now live on the outskirts of Damascus, surviving on UN handouts, money sent from siblings overseas and the rent from their house* in Baghdad.

America won’t give them lifelong care for their children!

“The Americans won’t give us treatment for the children,” Mr Shakir, 51, said. “Other refugees who went told me they don’t have the treatment, the Americans don’t look after the children. We don’t have a choice, but I hear that in Europe the treatment is better, the situation in Europe is better. They support you there and they support people with disabilities.”

Since we are such a downright mean country (where have I heard that before?), let’s hope they all go to Europe then!

* Note these people own a house!  They are not destitute camp dwellers.

 

Additional thoughts a few minutes later:  Maybe each prospective refugee coming to the US should sign an agreement of sorts saying he/she knows that life is hard and competitive in the US, that they will have to make it basically on their own after a brief resettlement period.   They would agree to come only if they confirm they are the kind of person who can start at the bottom of society and work their way up and that they will respect our system of laws while they are doing it.

I once gave a speech at Valley Forge Military Academy and the thrust of it was—the students (cadets) are completely responsible for what they make of themselves.  If they screw up it is on them (not their parents, the school, or their life circumstances) and if they succeed it is all because they have chosen to.  That to me is what America offers.

NY Resettlement worker charged in scamming UN

Here we go again, another grant fraud scam involving UN (American taxpayer) money.  (See the Maine case here).    Maybe we should have a whole separate blog on scams!   This time the woman charged is a pastor’s wife in Buffalo, NY.  From the Buffalo News:

Deborah C. Bowers earned a sterling reputation as a minister’s wife, a literacy volunteer, an aid worker who helped poor children in Iraq and as a woman who helps refugees settle in Buffalo.

But she found herself in a surprising new role Tuesday — as the defendant in a wire fraud and money-laundering case filed by the U.S. Justice Department.

Federal agents and prosecutors claim Bowers and another defendant defrauded the United Nations by misusing about $65,000 of the $350,000 they received to fund an Iraq radio station that promotes women’s rights.

According to court papers, Bowers in March 2005 used $7,362 of the U.N. money to pay off her Visa credit card. Authorities claim the Visa bill was for “various personal expenses” unrelated to the radio station.

And the following month, authorities charge, Bowers used $7,219 of the U.N. money to pay property taxes that her co-defendant— identified as Steve S. Jabar — owed on two properties in the Town of Tonawanda.

Other instances of misusing U.N. money are also alleged in an indictment unsealed Tuesday.

Please read the whole article and learn more about her Iraqi Muslim partner and their defense.  They say they were targeted by Homeland Security.  Homeland Security says they don’t target people, just follow the money trail.

And then this:

The pastor said his wife is a deeply caring woman who traveled to Iraq to help poor children and has dedicated much of her life to helping refugees in the Buffalo area.

As in the Maine case, doesn’t being a caring person and having good intentions count for something?

By the way, here is the AP story on the case.

Iraqi refugee family experiences resettlement irregularities in Tampa

Your tax dollars:

This is another in our long series of articles on unhappy Iraqi refugees in the United States.  In the usual format for such stories the reporter uses many column inches to explain what horrors the Iraqi family has experienced and how they looked to America as a heaven on earth.  Then the other shoe drops.

This time when the reporter turns to the ‘other shoe’ it is not your usual no jobs and lousy living conditions scenario.    The family’s resettlement sounds out of the ordinary and I wonder why.

From the St. Petersburg Times:

Last summer, after months of interviews and background checks, Hayder got a phone call. They had been cleared to go to the United States.

Hayder was elated. America, he thought, was a very civilized place. They would be safe and treated with respect there, he thought. But during cultural orientation, a Syrian refugee worker painted a bleak picture: no jobs, no help, no health insurance. Iman began to cry.

“Don’t worry,” Hayder told her. “God will protect us over there.”

In late August 2008, they landed in Tampa.

Their sponsor, an Iraqi man who has lived in the United States since the Persian Gulf War, picked them up. They settled into a room of his Lakeland home.

I’m all for “sponsors” for refugees but this didn’t sound right.  Isn’t the resettlement agency supposed to pick up the refugees at the airport and make sure they get settled into their own apartment, not just in one room in someone’s home?    This family was placed in the home of a single man who sounds like an alchoholic:

Weeks went by and the sponsor’s single lifestyle and drinking wore on Hayder and Iman. Wasn’t someone supposed to contact them, help them find an apartment, enroll Gailan in school? Iman would need a job; the family had to repay $3,500 in airfare.

Even if the resettlement agency was remiss in fulfilling its federal contract, somehow, someone made sure they knew the airfare had to be repaid (although originally paid by the taxpayer, a quarter of recovered airfare goes to the resettlement agency).  

After time passed and no one from the resettlement agency, Lutheran Services Florida, came to check on the family, apparently the family took matters into their own hands and went to the agency:

They had no car of their own, so they asked their sponsor to take them to Lutheran Services Florida in Tampa, the refugee resettlement agency. They were hopeful: They had heard the agency covered security deposits and months of rent until Iraqi families could get on their feet.

They learned quickly that this sort of help was not available.

The agency, through its federal contract, gives out $425 per person, said Rubis Castro of Lutheran Services in Tampa. In the past, private donations would supplement that stipend, but the recession has dried up that pool.

What does this mean, NOT available!  Yes, it is.   Lutheran Services Florida is required by a contract in this highly touted Public/Private partnership (LOL!)* to come up with its share.

All of our “clients” are VIP’s says a representative of Lutheran Services.  Really?

Even if the Iraqis risked their lives for U.S. troops and contract workers, as Hayder did, the settlement agency has to treat them the same, Castro said.

“We’ve got people from MacDill [Airforce base] calling saying, ‘Hey, treat them as VIPs,’ ” she said. “We always say every single client gets treated like a VIP.”  [LOL! again]

Lutheran Services did finally come up with some money, but not the furnishings its federal contract requires.    Check this out, the family had to spend $500 for furniture that Lutheran Services could have found for them through donations.

Hayder’s family received a total of $1,700 from Lutheran Services. He said he spent $500 of that to buy a sofa, television, throw rug and bunk beds from their sponsor. Last fall, they moved into an apartment of their own in Temple Terrace near Tampa.

Hayder, worried about paying the rent, went back to Lutheran Services. Was there anything more they could do?

A caseworker signed them up for food stamps, Medicaid and Supplemental Security Income so Hayder could receive disability checks. The SSI checks totaled $674 a month, but their rent was almost $800 and utility bills another $100. They were desperate for Iman to find a job.

And then this:

In the past, churches or families would sponsor Sudanese youth or Bosnian families for months if not longer, helping with rent, furniture, used cars and clothes. Just as important, they might serve as ambassadors in a new country, helping navigate a maze of confusing government bureaucracy and customs.

The reporter never tells us why that isn’t still happening.  Why isn’t Lutheran Services Florida finding churches and other private groups to help families like this Iraqi family?   I guess I will be told I hate Lutherans as I was at some previous post (I tried to find the commenter who told me I was a Lutheran-hater but couldn’t), but I think its because they are too damn busy keeping their agency going with taxpayer funded grant money for salaries etc. that they don’t have time to work hard for refugees.

*Lutheran Services Florida sued for government grant fraud!

So why am I laughing at the notion of a Public/Private Partnership?   Get this! Lutheran Services Florida was sued in 2005 by a former employee who alleged massive grant fraud at the NON-PROFIT church group.     Read the whole sorry tale here.

TAMPA – When it comes to statewide charities, it’s hard to beat the numbers for Lutheran Services Florida. A large nonprofit agency, it has served 700,000 people since its inception 23 years ago. With 60 social service programs under its management, Lutheran Services reported about $29-million in total revenue last year.

But now a former top executive claims Lutheran Services’ numbers don’t add up.

In a lawsuit filed last week, Dr. Peter Ledecky, the agency’s former vice president of program services, alleged that Lutheran Services has for years been mismanaging millions in government grants for its programs.

Filed in Hillsborough Circuit Court Sept. 7, the complaint accuses the agency of firing Ledecky in retaliation for blowing the whistle about what he contends are accounting improprieties at Lutheran Services that violated state and federal law.

“He realized that the administration of the grants was a giant mess, that they just basically wanted him to smooth things over and cover things up,” said Ledecky’s attorney, Ryan Christopher Rodems. “He said he couldn’t do that, and they pushed him out the door.”

I have no clue what happened with the lawsuit, but apparently it was settled or swept under the rug somehow because checking Lutheran Services Florida Form 990’s I note that in tax year 2006-2007 they were still getting an astounding amount of taxpayer grants.   Income reported that year was $32 million and $28 million of that comes from government grants leaving only $4 million from private donations.   This is outrageous, there is virtually no private funding in the Public/Private Partnership!   Only12.5% of their funds are privately raised!  Where is that ACLU when you need them?  Separation of church and state, my foot!

Being a movie extra beats cleaning toilets

The Voice of America reports on a new film on the war in Iraq, The Hurt Locker, which was filmed in Jordan.

The new film from director Kathryn Bigelow captures the day-to-day life-and-death drama drawn from real experiences of a US Army bomb disposal squad in the Iraq war. Here’s a look at The Hurt Locker.

IED’s – improvised explosive devices – have been a deadly fact of life on the highways and dusty side streets of Iraq. When one is found, they call in the highly skilled volunteers of the elite EOD – explosive ordnance disposal – squad.

They don’t call it ‘the world’s most dangerous job’ for nothing. The margin for error is zero; and there is more to worry about than just the IED, with snipers and insurgents often lying in wait.

After examining the device with a remote-control robot, a member of the team suits up in protective armor and attempts to disarm the bomb.

The screenplay was written by a journalist who was embedded with a bomb disposal unit in Iraq, and the director tried to capture the constantly threatening environment as well as the physical conditions.  So they filmed in Jordan, in locations which were similar to Iraq.

“You can’t fake that amount of heat,” [co-star] Mackie says. “You can’t fake that sand. You can’t fake the people. When you are on set and all of the extras are Iraqi refugees, it really informs the movie that you’re making. When you start hearing the stories from a true perspective, not from CNN or Fox News, but from a perspective of people who were actually there, it gives you a clear viewpoint of where you are as an artist and the story you would like to tell. It was a great experience to be there.”

Another actor says the film is non-political, unlike other films about the Iraq war, which were box-office bombs. I guess now that George W. Bush is out of office it’s okay for Hollywood to admit that there are a lot of dramatic stories to be told about the war. Look at all the WWII films that are still watched today. They’re about the actual battles and the conditions of the war, not about politics.

So maybe Hollywood will make more such films. And maybe these will provide more work for Iraqi refugees. It’s surely more interesting to be a movie extra than to be unemployed or cleaning toilets in America.

Will we be taking more of Iraq’s minorities?

Here is a little story put out by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) that got me wondering if we were going to add more of Iraq’s minority populations to our resettlement plans, in addition to the 1350 Palestinians we heard about early last week.  I have more questions then answers after reading this:

BAGHDAD (AFP) — Almost 200 Iranian-Kurd refugees have been moved from a makeshift camp on the Iraq-Jordan border to a larger camp near Syria, the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) said on Wednesday.

[….] 

“The group composed of 186 refugees has been temporarily relocated to Al Waleed refugee camp, on Iraq?s border with Syria,” it said.

Al Waleed is one of the camps we have come to know as a “Palestinian” camp with miserable living conditions (or so the refugee industry lobbyists say).   Is this the strategy, move people to miserable camps then tell the world they live in misery and need to be resettled to the West?

Incidentally, these are internally displaced people and I’m wondering if we are establishing a  pattern here—-are we going to be in the business of helping other countries sort out their minority problems by moving them to the US, as we are with the Palestinians?

And then this:

UNHCR figures published last August said Iraq had more than 42,000 non-Iraqi refugees, mainly Palestinians, Turks, and Iranians (Kurds and Arabs), and some Syrians, Sudanese and Somalis.

Why are all these people with different ethnic backgrounds classified as “refugees” if they are still in Iraq, surely they didn’t all just arrive there from elsewhere—who in their right mind would arrive in Iraq these days seeking asylum?

Please don’t tell me we (with our buddies in the UN) are helping Iraq get rid of minorities—helping it toward ethnic and religious purity of sorts?

Endnote:  We are already helping purify Iraq of its religious minorities, but those listed in the 42,000 number would be mostly Muslims and we all know how charitable Muslims are to their fellow Muslims, right!