DOS Fact Sheet on FY2003 Refugee Admissions from the Near East/South Asia
Fact Sheet
Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration
Washington,
DC
November 25, 2002
Refugee Admissions Program for Near East and
South Asia
Background
Since 1980, more than
133,000 refugees from Near East and South Asian countries have been offered
resettlement in the U.S. Most have been Iranian (about 58,000), Iraqi (36,000),
or Afghan (33,000). The majority of refugees currently identified by the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) as in need of third country
resettlement are, Iraqis and Iranians, often members of religious and ethnic
minorities or extremely vulnerable Women at Risk who have sought temporary
asylum in other countries in the region. INS conducts periodic refugee
interviewing visits to Turkey, Syria, Jordan, and Egypt, and interviews from
permanent offices in India and Pakistan. UNHCR continues to refer particularly
vulnerable Afghans for who repatriation is not a viable “durable solution” to
the program for U.S. resettlement in Turkmenistan and
Uzbekistan.
Due to additional new administrative requirements
imposed on the program in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks,
other processing disruptions, and a changed political environment in
Afghanistan, only some 1,800 refugees from the region were admitted to the U.S.
Resettlement Program in FY 2002, a substantial decrease from the 12,000 admitted
in FY 2001
Iraqis. Nearly two million Iraqis fled the
fighting during the Gulf War. Though most returned at the end of the war,
significant numbers remained in countries of first asylum, fearing persecution
in Iraq. Some 39,000, including ethnic and religious minorities and others who
participated in the uprising against the Iraqi regime, remained in refugee camps
in Saudi Arabia. From 1991 until 1997, the U.S. participated in a multi-country
resettlement effort led by the UNHCR for Iraqi refugees in Rafha camp in Saudi
Arabia. The effort resulted in third country resettlement of 24,260 refugees;
about 12,500 came to the U.S. The Department of State and INS coordinated
another U.S. resettlement visit to Rafha camp in June 2000 to process referrals
of over 200 Iraqi refugees not previously interviewed. The Department of State
and INS continue to process Iraqi refugees in several countries in the
region.
Iranians. In Iran, the Islamic government restricts
religious freedom and subjects certain religious minorities to widespread
discrimination and harassment. Members of these groups often face legal
penalties and persecution. As persons of special concern to the United States,
refugees who are members of Iranian religious minorities are eligible to apply
to our program regardless of family links and without UNHCR referral. They must
be able to demonstrate in an individual interview with the INS that they have
experienced persecution. Most Iranians are now processed in Turkey and
Austria.
Afghans. More than two million Afghan refugees who
fled from civil war and Taliban oppression to neighboring Iran and Pakistan have
repatriated to Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban. Despite this massive
repatriation, there remain a number of refugees for whom resettlement is the
only viable durable solution. Urban Afghan women who may have worked outside the
home before the Taliban took power and who have no immediate male family members
have been identified by the Department of State and UNHCR as most in need of
resettlement. Processing of vulnerable Afghan refugees in Pakistan continues
despite a difficult security environment and of Indo-Pakistani
tensions.
FY 2003 Admissions Program
The FY
2003 ceiling for refugee admissions from the Near East and South Asia is 7,000.
The Department of State is working with UNHCR to identify refugees in the region
requiring resettlement, especially women-at-risk. Refugees from the Middle East
are also processed from central Asian and Caucasus countries.