Dozens of Iraqi refugees Utah-bound in fall
The exact number of Iraqi refugees and the exact month of their arrival are still uncertain, says Aden Batar, director of immigration and resettlement at Catholic Community Services in Salt Lake City. "All the information we have is to prepare," he says.
There are now an estimated 2 million displaced Iraqis currently living in Syria, Jordan, Egypt, Iran, Lebanon and Turkey. There are also nearly that many who have fled their homes but are still living in Iraq, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Those numbers continue at a rate of up to 50,000 a month.
It's a "looming humanitarian crisis," according to the UNHCR. Within Iraq, it says, both the displaced and their host communities are running out of resources. In neighboring countries, the uprooted Iraqis have been relying on a "a social net of friends and relatives, which UNHCR worries is rapidly wearing thin."
The impact of 2 million displaced Iraqis on small countries such as Syria, says Patrick Poulin, resettlement director of the International Rescue Committee in Salt Lake City, "is similar to the U.S. taking in about 37 million of you-name-the-population in that same amount of time."
He guesses his agency will resettle 20 to 30 refugees next fall, and that Catholic Community Services may also receive that many. The bulk of the refugees will probably arrive in 2008, says Norman Nakamura, state coordinator for Refugee Resettlement for the Utah Department of Workforce Services.
For three years after the fall of Saddam Hussein, the UNHCR assumed that Iraq would stabilize and people would be able to return home, but in 2006 "spiraling violence led to increasing displacement," according to the UNHCR report. The Bush administration, which originally had planned to admit 500 Iraqis this year, increased that number in February to 7,000.
That's a tiny percentage of the total Iraqis who are afraid to return to Iraq but 17 percent of the total refugees allowed into the United States from all over the world last year, points out Cassandra Champion of Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service headquartered in Maryland. "It's quite a chunk."
The resettlement process, Nakamura explains, includes a sometimes lengthy background check by Homeland Security, then relocation paperwork. It's a process that can take six to 18 months, he says.
It's expected that the first group allowed into the United States will be Iraqis who have worked as interpreters or facilitators for the U.S. presence in Iraq.
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