WASHINGTON-The U.S. government will launch a program in
December to grant refugee status to some people under the age of 21 who live in
Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador and whose parents legally reside in the
United States.
U.S. officials say parents can ask authorities free of
charge for refugee status for their children in the Central American countries,
which are plagued by poverty and vicious gang violence. The program does not
apply to minors who have arrived in the U.S. illegally.
Vice President Joe Biden announced the program Friday at the
Inter-American Development Bank, where the presidents of the three Central
American countries will present a plan to stem child migration from their
countries.
U.S. officials said that children deemed refugees will be
able to work immediately upon arrival in the U.S., opt for permanent residency
the following year and for naturalization five years later. They did not say
how long the process of receiving refugee status will take.
Central American children who meet the requirements will be
part of a quota of 4,000 people from Latin America receiving refugee status
each fiscal year, officials said. The U.S. quota of Latin America refugees
currently consists of Cubans and Colombians.
Applicants who don't meet the requirements will be evaluated
to see if they can be admitted conditionally under a non-permanent migratory
status that allows them to work temporarily in the U.S.
Biden's announcement comes as President Barack Obama is
poised to unveil a series of executive actions on immigration that will shield
possibly around 5 million immigrants living in the country illegally from
deportation, according to advocates in touch with the White House.
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va.,
criticized the plan, which he described as "government-sanctioned border
surge" if Obama acts as expected.
"The policy announced today could open Pandora's box,
allowing potentially even more people to come to the United States. This is bad
policy and undermines the integrity of our immigration system," Goodlatte
said in a news release.
The program aims to be a legal and safe alternative to the
long and dangerous journey some Central American children take north to reach
the U.S. and to reunite with their parents in the U.S. Tens of thousands of
unaccompanied child and teenage migrants showed up at the U.S. border earlier
this year.
On Wednesday, Salvadoran Foreign Minister Hugo Martinez said
the plan includes measures to stimulate economic growth, improve public safety,
improve government agencies and provide better education and training
opportunities.
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