The Cubans are coming (again!)

According to Foreign Policy’s Top 10 stories of the year you missed, 77,000 Cuban asylum seekers quietly slipped into the US in 2006 and 2007.   Read about it here.

 Note to readers:   There is so much going on in the area of refugee resettlement and immigration generally these days, and we don’t always have time to put our two cents in on a story, so we are going to occasionally give you links to hot news items so you can keep up with the news.  

We are also adding a new category here called ‘Asylum seekers’ — a subject which we hope to cover in greater depths in coming weeks.

Look out Fort Wayne, IN, 1000 more refugees expected in ’08

We have written about problems the city of Ft. Wayne (Allen County) Indiana has had with the impact on the Health Department with increasing numbers of refugees with TB, now it looks like the impact will be felt throughout all community services.   According to the News-Sentinel yesterday, the President of the United Way has called for a closed to the public meeting to address the coming “surge.”   

In addition to the 800 anticipated direct resettlement Burmese the community has been warned the number could go over 1000 when the refugees who have been resettled elsewhere also come to Ft. Wayne (this is called secondary migration).   Attendees at the closed meeting will discuss issues that should concern taxpayers such as housing, health, schools, translation services and so on.   Meanwhile Debbie Schmidt, executive director of Catholic Charities is headed to Washington to find more federal money for the volags.

Schmidt is planning a return trip to Washington to talk with HHS [Health and Human Services, Office of Refugee Resettlement] officials to get more money for Indiana’s four refugee resettlement-sponsoring agencies [non-profit federal contractors such as Catholic Charities].

We’ve heard rumblings that a culture clash is coming in Ft. Wayne as Karin Christians are being placed in neighborhoods with Burmese Muslims.   What I would like to know is why would these volags assume that conflicts from the camps would not extend to neighborhoods in America?

One final thought–if the community of Ft. Wayne is all for more refugee resettlement, why close the meeting to the public?   Doesn’t Indiana have ‘open meeting’ laws?

Top 10 Volags for 2008

The US State Department has announced its top 10 volags (voluntary agencies) that will be responsible for resettling refugees in 2008.    There are no surprises, these 10 seem to have a monopoly on the refugee market.  In its fact sheet released yesterday the State Department also notes that these 10 contractors have 350 affiliated agencies (subcontractors) scattered around the country.

The agencies participating in the Refugee Admissions Reception and Placement Program in FY2008 are:

Church World Service

Episcopal Migration Ministries

Ethiopian Community Development Council

Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society

Iowa Bureau of Refugee Services

International Rescue Committee

Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service

United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants

 World Relief

If you go to Table C of the Office of Refugee Resettlement’s 2005 Annual Report to Congress here, you can begin your research on the Top 10.

Iraqis in Syria, new UN survey underway

The United Nations hopes to have completed a survey of Iraqi refugees in Syria by January, however early figures are being released.  I assume the early release is to help keep the drum beating to bring more Iraqis here now.  Here are some interesting bits from a McClatchy News story of a few days ago.

The survey may provide some insight into the impact of U.S. actions. The preliminary results suggest that as American forces moved into Baghdad’s neighborhoods to establish security, large numbers of Iraqis moved out.

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Of the refugees polled, 78 percent said they’d come from Baghdad , which has been the focus of military operations since the U.S. troop buildup began last February. Thirty-five percent said they’d fled between July and October, when U.S. troop strength peaked. Another 30 percent said they’d fled to Syria last year, as violence between Sunni and Shiite Muslims intensified.

As you will see the spin here is that somehow we cause the Iraqis to flee and no one ever suggests that maybe some of those fleeing are the bad guys.   This survey found that about half of the refugees they surveyed were men while an earlier survey we reported on here indicated that 73% were men and most of those were aged 18-50.   We asked if it was possible that a large portion of the “refugees” were fighters leaving Iraq as the surge began. 

Then this is how this article wraps up:

The survey indicates that Iraqis are losing faith in their prospects of resettlement abroad and are focusing more on survival in Syria . The number of refugees who said they’d registered with the U.N. primarily for the chance of resettlement dropped from 27 percent last May to 15 percent in November. About half now say their main reason for registering is to obtain refugee certificates, which help them gain food assistance and school vouchers in Syria .

I just did a quick look at the survey and don’t see anything about “losing faith in their prospects of resettlement abroad”.     Notice that only 15% (and it’s dropping) want to resettle elsewhere!   Is it possible that the number is dropping because they want to go home to Iraq?

And as for that last statement, the reporter should have said over 60 percent are seeking assistance with food, schooling, and medical assistance and that is why they have registered with the UN.    A statistic not addressed is that 23% were threatened and thus have registered with the UN, but no one tells us by whom they are threatened. 

Also, it appears that another important statistic was overlooked (maybe I missed it), or maybe it will be in the final report in January.  What percentage of the refugees are Christian, Sunni or Shite?

See the whole survey here.

Help Save Maryland — Impressive!

Last night I and a friend travelled to Rockville, MD for a meeting of “Help Save Maryland” an organization that is definitely going places.  Director Brad Botwin describes the organization, born in Montgomery County but spreading rapidly throughout Maryland, on its website as follows:

Help Save Maryland.com is a grassroots organization dedicated to preserving Maryland’s counties, cities and towns from the negative effects of illegal aliens.

Participants in the meeting, held at the Rockville Library, heard a presentation on what citizens could do about illegal immigrant problems they face from Joe Beahn of the Baltimore office of the US Office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).   Enthusiastic attendees kept Mr. Beahn answering questions well beyond the official end of the meeting. 

For more information and how to join “Help Save Maryland” go here.   Botwin described plans in the works for joint efforts involving grassroots activists in Virginia and Washington, DC to join with Maryland to seek help from Judicial Watch:

……a conservative, non-partisan educational foundation, promotes transparency, accountability and integrity in government, politics and the law.

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Judicial Watch fulfills its educational mission through litigation, investigations and public outreach.

Coincidentally, we learned that a fantastic national website called Illegal Alien Activity Tracking System (IAATS) is published right here in our own back yard, Washington County.   You have to see this!