Title: UN is sneaking sick and unvetted refugees (mostly male) into the U.S. in the middle of the night ! Source:
YOUTUBE URL Source:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qXL6IB9YKE Published:Mar 16, 2017 Author:CadetD Post Date:2017-03-16 19:44:08 by noone222 Keywords:None Views:111 Comments:6
Poster Comment:
I haven't viewed the entire video but what I have seen is credible and disgusting.
The Obama administration is using a taxpayer-funded program to award business grants to Salvadoran migrants deported from the United States.
Run by the nonprofit Instituto Salvadorno Del Migrante and funded through a $50,000 grant from the taxpayer-backed Inter-American Foundation, the program facilitates [deportees] reintegration into their communities and supports their enterprises by offering financial education, technical advice, and assistance with business plans.
So, if you break the rules and get deported, well help you start a business back in your home country. How absurd, said Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky.
The program was included in a report on government waste by the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Subcommittee on Federal Spending Oversight and Emergency Management, chaired by Paul.
The Inter-American Foundation sought to clarify that the Salvadoran grants are not intended for criminal deportees, but the subcommittee had no confirmation that criminal deportees are prohibited from receiving funds. No specific award criteria were provided.
What we do know is that about 30 percent of the returning deportees were deported due to violent or other crimes beyond undocumented presence, Paul stated.
Program supporters argue that negative impressions about deportees hamper their chances to get loans in El Salvador. Thats unfair, they said, given that most criminal deportees crimes involve assault, drunk driving, and drug possession.
To which Paul responded: So while banks justifiably hesitate to take on such a risk, it is apparently perfectly reasonable to pass that risk on to the American taxpayer.
Jessica Vaughn, policy analyst at the nonpartisan Center for Immigration Studies, said that while many things could go wrong, Its in our interest to ensure that people who are deported dont turn around and come back again.
In concept, it may not be that bad of an idea, she told Watchdog in an interview.
While asserting that border deterrence is the only thing that will work in the long run, Vaughn added, People have to have a reason to stay in their country.
But she shared Pauls concerns about rewarding criminal immigrants, noting that the bulk of deportees in the Obama era were convicted of crimes in the U.S.
If and when border security is tightened, Vaughn said, I can see a program like this when we get back to deporting people who are caught working and not necessarily criminals.
Mexico has returned to Cuba the first contingent of [U.S. deported] Cuban migrants since former U.S. president Barack Obama decided Thursday to end a U.S. policy of granting residency to Cubans who arrive on U.S. soil. [Note: Ref. thegatewaypundit.com article above]
Mexicos National Immigration Institute said Friday it put 91 Cubans on a federal police airplane and flew them back to the island after the Cuban government accepted their return.
Mexico had long technically been able to deport Cubans, but the Cuban government usually refused to accept them.
The Mexican government had been granting Cubans 20-day transit visas to make it to the U.S. border.
Lawsuit against State Department Also Seeks Refugee Travel Loans Default Numbers
(Washington, DC) Judicial Watch announced today that it filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of State seeking records on the number of Refugee Travel Loans issued by States Bureau for Population, Refugees, and Migration to the United Nations International Organization for Migration from 2010 to the present. Judicial Watch is also seeking the number of loans defaulted on and the amount of money written off on each defaulted loan. The suit was filed on January 24, 2017, in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia (Judicial Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No. 1:17-cv-00157)).
Judicial Watch filed the suit after the State Department failed to respond to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request on February 5, 2016, seeking the following:
All records reflecting the number of Refugee Travel Loans furnished by the State Departments Bureau for Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM) to the International Organization for Migration (IOM) per year; the number of travel loans that are defaulted upon per year; and the amount of money written off per defaulted loan. The Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration provides funding for aid and relief work abroad and the bureaus admissions office handles settling refugees in the United States. According to the agencys website, it spent nearly $545 million to provide new beginnings to the worlds most vulnerable refugees in 2016 and more than $2.8 billion to humanitarian assistance overseas. It provided $103 million directly to the UNs International Organization for Migration.
The International Organization for Migration, headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, has an annual budget of $1.4 billion and (as of 2014) a staff of 9,000 throughout the world. According to the International Organization for Migration website, the organization provides interest-free loans furnished by the Department of State to all refugees arriving in the United States:
All refugees arriving in the United States are offered interest-free travel loans by IOM. Refugees who accept these travel loans are required to sign a promissory note prior to departure, committing themselves to repayment of the debt within 46 months after arrival in the United States.
IOM arranges for refugee travel using funds furnished by the Department of State, and is mandated to subsequently effect collections on behalf of the Department of State. Repayments made by refugees toward their loans are returned to the Department of State for use by the Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM) to defray the cost of future refugee travel.
In July 2016, the United Nations General Assembly unanimously adopted a resolution making the International Organization for Migration part of the UN.
The Washington Post reported that the nine resettlement agencies contracted by the State Department to help resettle refugees in the U.S. actually make more than $5 million a year in commissions on refugee debt collection.
The State Department has stonewalled our request for refugee loans and associated taxpayer losses for a year an unlawful delay that screams cover up, said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. This is an opportunity for the Trump State Department to come clean and clean up this refugee welfare program.
In June 2016, Judicial Watch reported:
The U.S. government gives refugees on public assistance special loans of up to $15,000 to start a business but fails to keep track of defaults that could translate into huge losses for American taxpayers, records obtained by Judicial Watch reveal. The cash is distributed through a program called Microenterprise Development run by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Refugee Resettlement.
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HHS is not the only government agency doling out huge sums of cash for this cause, though its focus on refugees appears to be unique. Others, such as the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the Department of Labor (DOL) also dedicate hundreds of millions of dollars to various microenterprise causes. For instance, in one recent year alone USAID spent $223 million on microenterprise development activities, according to figures released by the agency. The USDA also allocates large sums to provide loans and grants to microenterprise development through a special Rural Microloan Revolving Fund and the DOL regularly pours lots of money into various microenterprise projects that are promoted as workforce investments in areas with high rates of poverty.