Iraqi refugees in Syria (Part II)

Last week I posted on a report from the Brookings Institution entitled, Iraqi Refugees in the Syrian Arab Republic, in an effort to answer the question, who are the Iraqis who have fled to Syria?  Since the United States has already begun resettling this fiscal year’s goal of 12, 000, it’s important for us to know who is coming to America.   See also Judy’s post about Christian Iraqi refugees in Jordan.

More from Brookings, who are they?

* “… many [are] urban, moderate or secular Sunnis who do not want to live under the sway of Salafi insurgent groups.”    Salafis are the hard-line fundamentalist Muslims.

* “Many of the Kurds seem to be crossing into Syria in the hope of obtaining third-country resettlment….”  Apparently in May, Kurdish men were crossing into Syria to register as asylees but then freely returned  home making them not true refugees.

*  Shia Iraqis are entering Syria looking for better economic conditions, to escape hardline Islam and to obtain resettlement in third countries.

* Many Christian Iraqis went to Syria in the 1990’s to escape the Saddam Hussein regime.  Others had worked for that regime and left after the regime was toppled.   Many Christians who stayed in Iraq worked for foreign organizations or the multinational forces and have now left Iraq.   The report mentions several times that Christians who sold alchohol were especially driven from Iraq by hard-line Islamic groups.

There are additional reports of radical Sunni insurgents asking Christians to pay the jizya to the Mosque or leave the country.   The report describes the jizya as “a head-tax that non-Muslims historically paid in Muslim states.” 

Brookings says the Iraqi Christians expect they cannot go back to Iraq but “that leaving Iraq will lead to the disappearance of their communities and their distinct identities.” 

* Then there were 30,000 Palestinians in Iraq, “favored under Saddam”.    Many have gone to Syria and some are in refugee camps along the border between Iraq and Jordan.   Somehow Hamas is involved in the “deadlock around the Palestinian refugees blocked between Iraq and Jordan.”   Incidentally recent reports are that some of these Palestinians are being resettled by Brazil.

*  Finally the report discusses the Sunni and Shia radical groups that have left Iraq and entered Syria.  The first group right after the invasion were members of the Saddam Hussein regime and then in the last couple of years the radicals are likely a result of stepped up military action by the multi-national forces (the Surge?).

According to Brookings some of these are coming as refugees, others come “for rest-and-recuperation, or even to check up on whether other members of the group are living cleanly, in keeping with strict Islamic instructions.”

At the end of this Brookings report, there are some statistics gathered from interviews of 192 Iraqis in Syria.   Although the sample must be too small to be accurate it is nonetheless worth mentioning.

44% of the Iraqis living in Syria are Sunni

22% Shia

13% Christian

73% are men

69% are aged 18-50

41% left Iraq in 2006

1% say they left due to an affiliation with the international presence

2% operated liquor stores

23% left due to sectarian violence

I kind of got a chuckle out of the statistics above.  The primary reason given by the mainstream media for the persecuted refugees who must come to America immediately is because of their involvement with the US government (as translators and such), yet only 1% gave that as a reason for fleeing Iraq.  

Here we go again, another story of refugee neglect

It’s incredible to discover that the complaints about refugee resettlement agencies not doing their jobs are cropping up everywhere.   See our interview with Chris Coen of Friends of Refugees just two days ago. 

Then here is an article about Burmese refugees from the St. Louis Post Dispatch the same day:

A few of these families say they feel abandoned and lost here, unable to communicate their needs and virtually trapped in the apartments provided for them by the International Institute.

______

Salim Khan has tried to fill in the gaps. He lives in Edwardsville and emigrated from Burma about 20 years ago. He was contacted a few weeks ago by a friend about the newest immigrants. He and his wife, Linda, first visited Esa, his wife, their three children and his wife’s sister at their apartment on South Grand Boulevard. The Khans were appalled that the front window was broken and that they lacked even a fan to cool off inside the brick building.

______

The Khans have reached out to the institute, the family’s landlord and local government agencies on behalf of the families. Salim Khan said he was angered by the attitude he heard from a caseworker who told him the families should be grateful for their life here. It must be better than a camp, he was told.

______

“It broke my heart that they weren’t getting too much assistance because they didn’t know how to ask for it,” she said.

These resettlement agencies are being paid by the taxpayer to do this work for the first 4 months and it appears they aren’t even doing that!     I can’t help but think we would be better off if all refugees were resettled by the Private Sector Initiative where refugees are sponsored and cared for by individual churches or groups.   The sponsoring entitity then takes the family under its wing and helps them start life in America for as long as it takes to get the family assimilated.   Let’s just cut out the middlemen!

Update:  The International Institute of St. Louis is a subcontractor of the US Committee for Refugees and Immigrants which we posted on here.

An exclusive interview with Chris Coen, Friends of Refugees

When questions were raised in Hagerstown, MD recently about how well refugees were being cared for by the church group that brought them,  we thought our situation was an anomaly, that is, until we heard about Christopher Coen and his work with Friends of Refugees.   It doesn’t matter what one’s position is on the number of refugees resettled and where they might come from, what we all agree on is that once here they must be taken care of in a humane way and that agencies, whether government or private, must fulfill their legal and moral responsiblity to care for them.

We are pleased now to publish this exclusive interview with a tireless advocate for the rights of resettled refugees.

Hi, Chris, thanks for taking time to tell us your story.

We’ve seen some of your detailed research on failures by some non-profit groups to adequately care for the refugees in their charge. How did you get started doing this work? And for how long have you been doing it?

I got started after I read some articles in 2001 about the ‘Lost Boys’ of Sudan, refugees who were then arriving in the US. I was moved by the suffering they had endured as children and I decided to get involved in helping them. I gathered up some donations and drove to Fargo and to Sioux Falls, and later to Chicago and Michigan. I discovered that the refugees were being neglected. They would call their resettlement agency caseworkers for assistance and all they would get was voicemail. The caseworkers would not return their calls. I would contact the resettlement agencies myself, and I got the phone hung up in my ear. When I later went to Chicago I found an even more deplorable situation. After  numerous letters to the State Department and their subsequent visit to the Chicago resettlement agency that I found so many problems at, I realized that the government was helping to do a cover-up. I decided to dig further to see how widespread the problems were.

We’ve found that when anyone raises questions about refugee resettlement they are immediately labeled anti-refugee (or worse). Have you experienced that and if so, how do you counter it?

I have not been labeled anti-refugee, maybe because I help the refugees that I find being neglected. Resettlement agency workers though have regularly blamed me and the refugees for the reports I’ve put in to the government agencies. Numerous times I’ve been told that the refugees are liars (they can’t all be lying all the time). I’ve also had my statements questioned as if I was reporting misinformation when I was merely forwarding the refugees’ own complaints to the government agencies. If the refugees have some misunderstandings, whose responsibility is that?

How do you go about your research?

I put in FOIA’s (Freedom of Information Act requests) on a regular basis for the State Department’s refugee resettlement monitoring reports. I’ve found these to be full of extensive documentation of widespread mismanagement, malfeasance, and refugee neglect and abuse. In the past year or so there seems to have been an effort to conceal this information in the reports. I also researched the mainstream media’s infrequent investigation of refugee resettlement abuses. The Atlanta-Journal Constitution did a series of revealing articles several years ago. I’ve also gone and extensively monitored several resettlement agencies that refugees had reported to me as particularly bad. I’ve been doing a ‘case study’ of Lutheran Social Services of North Dakota (LSSND) since 2001. After seven years of my documenting LSSND failing to meet the minimum requirements of their contracts, the State Department visited Fargo and concluded that LSSND was doing fine. They were particularly impressed by their three-ring folders.

Have the government agencies been ready and willing to answer your FOIA requests?

They have, but after long delays. There have been additional problems. I have found missing pages and many redacted (blacked-out) sections of documents. When I wrote back to ask for the missing pages or the reasons for withholding some information, I have not received a response. How do we know the government is using legitimate reasons to withhold some information, e.g. if the information is personal info. on certain refugee individuals, if they won’t at least say what reasons they are using? I also noticed that the number of reports I get doesn’t match the number of agencies the State Department claims to monitor each year. Are documents being withheld or does the State Department just not monitor very many agencies each year? I don’t know because when I write to request that information I have received no response.

Tell us about a couple of the worst cases you’ve seen? 

At the World Relief affiliate north of Tampa, Florida in New Port Richey, refugees complained to me that World Relief had referred them to jobs in the next county over. The refugees had to ride bikes three hours each way to get to work. They had to leave before sunrise to get to work on time. The refugees also told me that World Relief had not given them any beds for months and that they had to sleep on the floor. They said that nobody at World relief would answer the phones, so they would ride their bikes to the office and knock on the door. Nobody would answer the door even though the refugees could hear people inside. The resettlement agency also used the refugees as free labor for World Relief and rented the refugees out as day labor to clean nursing homes, but then did not pay them.

In Chicago the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants affiliate is Heartland Alliance. There I found refugees in run-down, dilapidated and roach infested apartments. The Lost Boys were being regularly attacked on the streets, yet neither Heartland Alliance nor the State Department would do anything about it. I counted over twenty Lost Boys who were attacked – three were stabbed, one was brain damaged, and many had their teeth knocked out. I later found out that refugees had been complaining to the State Department about these Chicago neighborhoods for several years and the PRM dismissed it as “perceived safety” of the community.

Have you voiced your concerns to the contractors and grantors in the U.S. government?

Yes, to both. The resettlement agencies and Volags (voluntary agencies) dismiss every single complaint put forth by the refugees. They are highly defensive and after numerous hang-ups when I have called to calmly speak about the complaints with the resettlement agencies, I gave up and forward all complaints directly to the government oversight agencies now. I regularly write to the State Department and the Office of Refugee Resettlement in HHS, but they usually fail to respond in any way, or else they sent a short form letter that is non-responsive to the complaints set forth. A complaint I put to the Office of the Inspector General at the State Department was completely ignored. My certified letters were returned unclaimed.

Have you ever shared your concerns with Members of Congress? If so, who were they, and what sort of reception have you received?

Yes, they have also been unhelpful. They usually do not respond in any fashion to even the most well documented cases. In a few instances I have received a long run-around that ended going no where, e.g. Congressman Henry Waxman’s staff apparently was just mining us for information, and then did nothing to help reform the refugee program. In the end they said such things as the resettlement agencies can’t guarantee employment for the refugees. When I asked that there at least be some measure of effort by the resettlement agencies to help the refugees find jobs, e.g. at least three referrals to employers, I received a stony silence. Congress appears to be made up of people who don’t care about how our tax money is spent, or who act as the resettlement agencies’ apologists.

How about the so-called mainstream media — or any media — any reporters interested in investigating your cases?

No, none.

In any of the cases you’ve worked on, do you feel that you have made a difference in improving the lives of refugees involved?

In almost every case yes. The refugees greatly benefit from even a little bit of assistance , e.g. finding a job, or dealing with a hostile landlord, or simply finding clothes that the resettlement agencies are contracted to supply and often don’t.

How would you reform the federal Refugee Resettlement program? At what level is reform most needed — the UN, the State Department, or the refugee agencies?

We need the most basic level of reform first – start enforcing the very minimal ‘minimum requirements’ of the State Department’s contracts with the resettlement agencies. Make the inspections more regular instead of once every ten years or so, and stop making them pre-announced (we heard of one resettlement agency that spent six months practicing for their inspection). Reform is most needed at the resettlement agencies, but the State Department needs to start effective oversight or the agencies will never change. Currently there are almost no consequences to failure to provide required services and items. The State Department has created these problems by their failure to enforce the contracts and to effectively oversee the refugee program. The UN is also in need of reform but we are focused on the U.S. part of the problem. The Sudanese refugees all tell the same story of the Kenyans cheating them of food at the Kakuma refugee camp. The Kenyans fake all the UN inspections, and siphon off a huge amount of aid meant for the refugees.

You mentioned earlier that you work directly with refugees, do they give you their thoughts on how to reform the program?

Yes, I work directly with the refugees all the time and hear their stories. I forward their complaints to the government oversight agencies. The refugees just want basics – clothes, assistance finding jobs, help with dealing with hostile or neglectful landlords. They also ask for a few more minimum requirements from the resettlement agencies – phones, irons, umbrellas, curtains. We’ve written to the State Department suggesting these improvements and we have received no response.

Tell us about your group, Friends of Refugees?

It’s a small group of all volunteers. We directly help the refugees and spend the rest of the time trying to reform the mismanaged refugee program. After we registered our name with the state of Minnesota, Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service lawyers came to Minnesota to file a U.S. patent on our name. They now use the name on the website to fundraise.

How can people reach you?

FORefugees@hotmail.com

Thank you, Chris Coen.

Bush says, 80,000 refugees for FY 2008

Here is a bit of news we missed earlier in the month.  President Bush in his 2008 Determination Letter set the goal for Refugee Resettlement for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1 at 80,000.  Go here to see the breakdown.

I don’t know off-hand what the final numbers were for 2007, but I doubt they reached 50,000.  If anyone has the final number, please let us know.

Burmese refugee update

I simply do not understand the do-gooder UN and its allies in the refugee industry here in America!   Last week I posted about the Burmese refugee washing dishes in Orlando (probably at Disney World!).   Why are we bringing thousands of former Burmese freedom fighters here?  Will someone tell me why they aren’t left in Burma (Myanmar) to stand side by side with brave monks and work to free their country from brutal military rule?  

Here is a new article today from the New York Sun.   

ON THE THAI-BURMESE BORDER — A cramped bamboo hut, a monthly rice ration, and listless days inside the Thai jungle are the lot of former Burmese guerrilla fighters and underground activists awaiting resettlement to America and Europe.

______

At a refugee camp three hours’ walk from the border with Burma, those who spent their 20s and 30s resisting one of the world’s most repressive governments are now largely quarantined from playing an active role in the events of their native country. That sense of isolation was most acute, they say, in August and September, when street demonstrations back home swelled into the largest popular challenge to the rule of Burma’s military junta in decades.

[…..]

American laws generally prohibit members of any armed resistance movement from receiving refugee status. Nonetheless, American immigration officials say each application is considered on a “case by case basis.” In the last year, 13,896 Burmese were resettled in America as refugees.

______

But not all living here intend to leave.

______

“If there is a way to fight against the regime at the moment, I prefer to take part in that,” an officer for the political wing of the Karen government, Sah Wan Tha, who has lived in the camp for a decade, said.

I suspect, the do-gooders in the refugee resettlement industry are wimps themselves and could not possibly understand that someone would prefer to stay and fight for their country rather than wash dishes in Orlando while living in a squalid apartment.   Or, could it be that each refugee represents continued pay checks for the the UN and the volags?

I’m still waiting for someone to tell me why we are doing this.