UNITED STATES –
CANADA – IRAQ
US asks
Canada to admit more Iraqis
Washington appeals to Canada to help manage the growing
refugee flow. Ottawa has not yet responded. US could
admit up to 20,000 people but in 2006 let in only 202.
Ottawa (AsiaNews) – The
United States has called on Canada to accept more
refugees from Iraq as the unrest there intensifies,
driving more and more people into exile.
Ellen Sauerbery, a US
assistant secretary of state, spent two days in Ottawa
last week discussing the matter with Canadian foreign
affairs and immigration officials.
Canadian officials say no
policy decisions have been made.
Ms Sauerbery said many
Iraqis who fled to Syria or Jordan, including victims of
torture, women and children, and members of the small
Christian minority, will never be able to return to
their country.
“We've encouraged Canada to
make this a priority in their resettlement policy
because this is an area of tremendous need and
vulnerability,” she said.
She said she's been told
Canada has already accepted 49 such Iraqi refugees.
In fact, Washington might as
well look at its own immigration policy and make it
easier for Iraqis to come. Currently, the quota for Iraq
stands at around 500. but a few weeks ago, the assistant
secretary of state said that the US president has the
authority to raise the ceiling to emergency levels at
20,000.
Arthur E. Dewey, a former
assistant secretary of state for refugee affairs,
explains that "for political reasons the administration
will discourage" Iraqi resettlement in the U.S. "because
of the psychological message it would send, that it is a
losing cause."
According to estimates by
the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR),
only 202 Iraqi refugees were admitted in 2006 in the US
and almost all had applied before the 2003 war. Since
then 466 Iraqis were admitted but the overall number of
refugees has climbed to 2 million.
UNHCR has appealed for US$
60 million to confront the Iraqi refugee crisis in 2007.
In 2007 Washington has allocated US$ 20 million for
Iraq’s humanitarian crisis.
According to US Deputy
Secretary of Defence Gordon England, the Iraq War is
costing the US an average US$ 8.4 billion a month.