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| The Bipartisan Refugee Protection Act Torchlight |
The Torchlight Campaign Protecting Refugees Who Seek Asylum "Expedited removal," a key feature of the 1996 law, gives INS agents new powers to deport those who arrive at the border without valid travel documents. Under expedited removal, INS agents also have the power to deport people even if their documents are valid, but the INS agent merely suspects the documents might not be valid. But many asylum seekers arrive without valid passports or visas precisely because they have escaped under duress, or their papers have been confiscated - like many Jews attempting to flee Europe during World War II, or like the Kosovar Albanians who were stripped of their identification papers as part of the Serbian ethnic cleansing campaign. Even for refugees who are in fear for their lives, it can be difficult to plead for asylum as soon as they step off a plane. Communication at the border is often hard. Many refugees, especially victims of torture, rape or war-horrors, find it extremely difficult to speak of their experiences immediately upon arrival. Interviews are rapid, interviewers are sometimes hostile, and inadequate translation often makes communication even tougher. In such conditions, mistaken deportations have occurred and are inevitable. The 1996 law also states that asylum seekers who are not deported through expedited removal are subject to "mandatory detention." Detainees can be held in prison-like conditions for weeks, months, and even, sometimes, years while their asylum applications are reviewed. On any given day several thousand asylum seekers are locked behind bars in the United States, in conditions that are as harsh, and sometimes even harsher, than those of convicted criminals. But asylum seekers are not criminals. Asylum-seeking is a long and difficult process, with many safeguards to flag and exclude people who might be dangerous. All asylum applicants are fingerprinted, their fingerprints are checked by the FBI, and their names are compared against a series of databases and watch lists maintained by the INS and the State Department. This is much more scrutiny than we apply to businesspeople, to students, or to tourists entering the United States. Asylum seekers deserve a welcoming hand, not handcuffs. As Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS) put it, "Asylees, by definition, represent the best of American values. Often, they are people who have stood alone, at great personal cost, against hostile governments for principles which are fundamental to us such as political and religious liberty." Human Rights First is working with Members of Congress in both parties to pass legislation that would right the wrongs of the 1996 law and protect refugees from deportation and imprisonment that can put their lives at risk. In the House of Representatives, Representatives Chris Smith (R-NJ), Howard Berman (D-CA), Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL), and William Delahunt (D-MA) introduced the Refugee Protection Act, H.R. 4074, in March 2002 And in the Senate, the Refugee Protection Act, S 1131, is sponsored by Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT), Sen. Sam Brownback (R-KS), Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-MA), Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), Sen. Richard Durbin (D-IL), Sen. James Jeffords (I-VT), Sen. Bob Graham (D-FL) and Sen. Paul Wellstone (D-MN) The Bipartisan Refugee Protection Act:
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