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U.S. SENATOR PATRICK
LEAHY
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CONTACT: Office of Senator
Leahy, 202-224-4242 |
VERMONT |
Statement of Senator Patrick Leahy
Subcommittee on Immigration, Border Security, and Citizenship
Hearing on “Refugees: Seeking Solutions to a Global Concern”
September 21, 2004
Today’s hearing provides our annual opportunity to
review the state of our refugee program. According to the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees, there were 9.7 million refugees in the
world at the end of 2003. Many of them live in desperate conditions in
refugee camps around the world, and a substantial number have no realistic
hope of returning to their homes in the foreseeable future. Our ideals and
our tradition demand that we assist these people, including by offering
some refuge in our nation.
This administration has indicated that we will
resettle more than 50,000 refugees in the United States in the current
fiscal year. Although this is a substantial increase from the 28,421
refugees admitted in fiscal year 2003, we will again fall far short of the
President’s stated goal of resettling 70,000 refugees.
I know that there are many dedicated people in the
State Department and the Department of Homeland Security who are working
hard to increase the numbers of refugees admitted. I urge them to continue
their work, and I would ask our witnesses today to offer their concrete
plans for how we will again reach the 70,000 refugees plateau.
I would like to note an
issue of great importance to me that was included in the report on the
refugee program from the Departments of State, Homeland Security, and
Health and Human Services, which this Committee recently received. The
report stated: “We note that the 10,000-person statutory limitation on the
number of asylees who can adjust their status has resulted in a backlog of
adjustment of status applications some 17 years long. Nearly 22,500
individuals were granted asylum during fiscal year 2003. It is estimated
that these asylees from 2003 will not be eligible to apply for U.S.
citizenship until at least 2025 if the cap remains at 10,000 adjustments
per year.”
Along with Senator Kennedy,
Senator Brownback and others in Congress, I have long believed that we
should abolish the arbitrary annual cap on the number of asylees who
can become legal permanent residents. This is not about who can come here,
or giving people rights they would not otherwise have. These are people
who our government has found have a reasonable fear of persecution if
they returned to their countries. They live and work here legally and they
have the right to apply to become citizens, but the backlog caused by this
cap forces them to wait for 17 years to become citizens. Some are
literally dying before their applications for citizenship can be
processed. Abolishing the cap would also enhance homeland security,
because any asylee or other alien who applies for citizenship must go
through a rigorous background check.
I know Senator Sessions is
interested in this issue, and I am encouraged that the Administration has
indicated a desire to work with us to address what has really become an
issue of basic fairness for people who have complied with our immigration
laws.
Finally, I would like to take this opportunity to
praise my own State’s dedication to refugees. I am proud that Vermont has
provided a home for refugees from Bosnia, Vietnam, Sudan, Somalia, and
elsewhere around the world. The presence of these refugees has made
Vermont a richer and better place to live.
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