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Faith leaders, politicians: New immigration order still anti-Muslim

Free Press wire reports | 3/10/2017, 8:51 p.m.
Federal judges may find President Trump’s new executive order on immigration more acceptable than the last. But many religious groups ...

Federal judges may find President Trump’s new executive order on immigration more acceptable than the last.

But many religious groups and faith leaders see no meaningful difference in the new measure, which President Trump signed privately last Monday.

“Make no mistake, this is the Muslim ban that President Trump and his aides have been promising,” Farhana Khera, president of Muslim Advocates, said in a statement. “The administration is just rearranging the chairs at the same table.”

Critics of what Ms. Khera calls “Muslim Ban 2.0” argue that it still singles out only Muslim-majority nations and fuels Islamophobia that already is on the rise in the United States.

“President Trump’s revised executive order is still a Muslim ban and it’s still bigoted and un-American,” said Rabbi Jack Moline, president of the Interfaith Alliance.

The new ban differs from the executive order President Trump signed on Jan. 27 on several points that the Trump administration hopes will blunt criticism and help the new order pass legal muster.

A federal appeals court stayed President Trump’s first order on Feb. 3, with a Virginia federal district court judge also issuing a preliminary injunction on Feb. 13 barring the travel ban’s implementation in the commonwealth.

In a statement issued late Monday, a spokesman for Virginia Attorney General Mark R. Herring said the office will review the president’s new order and filings in the Virginia case to determine “how best to move forward in a way that protects Virginia and its residents.”

In a statement, Mr. Herring said the new order “still sends a horrible message to the world, to Muslim-Americans and to minority communities across the country without any demonstrable benefit to national security.”

Under the new order, no refugees will be accepted into the United States for 120 days. After that, the number of refugees allowed to enter will not exceed 50,000 in a year — compared to the 110,000 refugees allowed to enter the United States under former President Obama.

The revised executive order:

• Allows Syrians to be resettled in the United States after a 120-day ban. They were indefinitely excluded under the previous ban.

• Drops Iraq from the original list of seven Muslim-majority nations from which foreign nationals are blocked for 90 days from entering the United States. The remaining six countries are Yemen, Somalia, Libya, Sudan, Syria and Iran.

• Removes the preference given to refugees from members of minority religious groups, such as Christians — a distinction many Christian groups considered un-Christian.

(U.S. Sen. Mark R. Warner, Virginia’s senior senator, said while President Trump’s new order may avoid some of the issues attached to his initial executive order, “improving the implementation of a poor policy still results in poor policy.”

(“There is no evidence that immigrants from the countries listed … pose a heightened threat to our security. There are serious people at the Department of Homeland Security and within the intelligence community who have been considering this issue for years,” his statement continued. “Perhaps a better approach would be to allow them to recommend what our policy should be.”

(Sen. Tim Kaine, who ran for vice president in November with Mr. Trump’s Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton, said the new administration’s immigration orders “remain a mess.”

(“Discriminating against people from certain countries with no evidence that they pose any greater risk than those from other countries not affected is more about politics than about safety,” he said in a statement. “And perpetuating the stereotype that refugees fleeing humanitarian disasters are suspicious is cruel.

(“Congressional Republicans and Democrats should join together and do what the Senate did four years ago — pass comprehensive immigration reform to address these question in an evidence-based way.”)

Faith leaders also take issue with the new order’s limitations on the resettlement of refugees as a refutation of the religious requirement to shelter the most vulnerable.

“While it appears that the administration has sought to correct some of the flaws contained in the first executive order, this newly issued one still prevents us from undertaking life-saving work during the most critical time for refugees and displaced persons in human history,” Linda Hartke, president of Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services, said in a statement.

“The new order doubles down on demonizing refugees — implying that America should fear those who have been persecuted, tortured, threatened and victimized by terrorists,” she continued.

But some who advocate for the Middle East’s beleaguered Christian minorities worry that the removal of special protections for minority religions necessitates a new order to address their suffering at the hand of the group known as the Islamic State.

“There’s a dire need for President Trump to issue a separate executive order — one specifically aimed to help ISIS genocide survivors in Iraq and Syria,” Nina Shea, director of the Hudson Institute’s Center for Religious Freedom, said in a statement after the new executive order’s release.

“For three years, the Christians, Yizidis and others of the smallest religious minorities have been targeted by ISIS with beheadings, crucifixions, rape, torture and sexual enslavement,” she said.

The new order, set to go into affect Thursday, March 16, also contains exceptions for dual citizens and holders of green cards who want to travel to the United States from the restricted countries.

“It is the president’s solemn duty to protect the American people,” Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told reporters after the president signed the new order. “As threats to our security continue to evolve and change, common sense dictates that we continually re-evaluate and reassess the systems we rely upon to protect our country.”

Faith leaders disagree with the original ban and the changes.

“The language of the ban is slightly changed, but the results for refugees are the same,” said Mark Hetfield, CEO of HIAS, a Jewish agency that resettles immigrants.

“Even for the thousands of refugees who have already followed all the rules and have already been subject to extreme security vetting, President Trump will not allow them into the United States.”