REFUGEES: Asylum in the U.S.

REFUGEES: Asylum in the U.S.
▪ 1994

      In January the U.S. Coast Guard formed a flotilla around Haiti to stop refugees from fleeing to the United States. In the same month, Zoë Baird's nomination as attorney general was scrapped because she had employed an illegal immigrant as a nanny. In June a federal judge ruled that some 270 HIV-positive Haitians already granted political asylum had to be released from an "HIV prison camp" at Guantánamo Bay. In June seven Chinese died when the smuggler ship Golden Venture ran aground near New York City with about 300 people crammed aboard. In August a Brazilian became the first person to be granted asylum in the U.S. because of his fear of persecution as a homosexual. Immigration policy is front-page and controversial. Americans are schizophrenic on the subject—proud of the Statue of Liberty's beckoning to the "huddled masses" yet afraid of too many foreigners worsening a stagnant economy.

      Pres. Bill Clinton in late July proposed reforms to the system, including "expedited exclusion" for those seeking asylum. Current U.S. law grants political asylum to people with a "well-founded fear" of persecution in their country of origin. About 140,000 requests are granted each year. A request for asylum may take months or years to process; some 10,000 requests occur each month, and in mid-1993 there were 300,000 applications backlogged. Clinton's proposal would grant Immigration and Naturalization Service officials at the point of entry the ability to judge the "justifiableness" of fear of persecution within a few days; the person denied asylum would then be deported. Immigrant rights and civil liberties advocates cautioned that this would deny "due process and meaningful judicial review to legitimate asylum seekers."

      Meanwhile, the U.S. government was attempting to circumvent the asylum process. On June 21 the Supreme Court upheld 8-1 the government's policy of intercepting Haitian refugee boats while in international waters and forcibly repatriating the Haitians without screening them for asylum. In a similar move in July, the U.S. Coast Guard guided three ships smuggling would-be Chinese asylum-seekers from international waters to Mexican ports and persuaded the Mexican government to repatriate them.

      The granting of asylum has always been political. During the Cold War, the majority of those who received asylum came from Soviet-bloc countries, while those seeking asylum from governments friendly to the U.S. (such as El Salvador) were denied. More recently, of those Chinese applying for asylum an incredible 85% had received it, while fewer than one-third of the 40,000 Haitians who fled their country after the 1991 coup had been granted asylum.

      (ELLEN FINKELSTEIN)

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Universalium. 2010.

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