Friday, October 8
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NOORANI'S NOTES
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Per three officials, the U.S. was aware as far back as July that
thousands of Haitians were heading to the southern border, "but a
failure to share intelligence and an internal debate over whether to
increase deportations
 left
immigration officials ill-equipped to handle the 28,000 who converged on
a Texas bridge last month," reports Julia Ainsley of NBC News
. Â
Because intelligence sharing fell short within and beyond DHS, the
government did not have a handle on the size of the group, how quickly
it was moving, or the fact that it would arrive at a single location,
Ainsley reports.Â
Meanwhile, at a congressional hearing Thursday, the former U.S.
envoy for Haiti, Daniel Foote, said that returning migrants to the
country will have a negative impact, per Al Jazeera
. "Deportation,
in the short term, is not going to make Haiti any more stable;
in fact it's going to make it worse," Foote said. "... We're
not repatriating people to Afghanistan right now. And having served in
both places, the security situation [in Haiti] is not that dire but
it's not far off, and we're deporting people to Haiti."Â
The need for commonsense solutions, for migrants at the border and
across our immigration system, has long been clear. Join us
for Leading The Way
 later this month
as we gather influential speakers from a variety of backgrounds to
discuss solutions. Register here for free
.Â
Welcome toâ¯Friday's editionâ¯of Noorani'sâ¯Notes. If you have a
story to share from your own community, please sendâ¯itâ¯to me
atÂ
[email protected]
. Â
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AFGHAN RESETTLEMENTÂ -Â Like many refugee resettlement agencies across
the country, Lutheran Social Services of the National Capital Area is
"rebuilding on the fly after deep cuts during the Trump administration,"
reports Joel Rose of NPR
. Almost every
day, newly arriving Afghan refugees of all ages "are coming with
really pressing immediate needs. Sometimes it's just as basic as
clothing, showers, food," said CEO Kristyn Peck. "And then trying to
make sure that they have a place to stay that night. And then move them
into permanent housing as quickly as possible." Elsewhere at NPR
, Franco
Ordoñez introduces us to the former Delaware governor - and
grandchild of refugees - who is charged with
answering governors' and mayors' questions about resettling
Afghan evacuees. Â
ECONOMIC IMPACTÂ -Â In a broad look at where an initial round of
Afghan evacuees will be resettled, Tim Henderson of The Pew Charitable
Trusts'Â Stateline
 reports
on how states and localities are helping welcome them - or
not. Many foresee an economic benefit: Russell Smith, CEO of Refugee
Services of Texas, told Henderson that employers are
calling the nonprofit weekly in search of potential
hires. Meanwhile, states including Utah and New York are allocating
funds to help support Afghan refugees. "This is a story about Buffalo,
Rochester, Syracuse, Albany and Utica, cities that are urgently in need
of population growth, and refugees are very much part of it,"
said David Dyssegaard Kallick of the Fiscal Policy Institute. "It's
primarily a human rights issue, but it's good to know
that ... they're going to be a long-term benefit to the local
economy."Â Â
Here's today's collection of local stories of support:Â Â
* Erika Berg's visual storytelling workshop - "designed to give
refugees, who are forced into their situation and migration, the agency
to tell the story of their relationship to the crisis back
home" - helps resettled Afghans and other former refugees process
what is happening in the homes they had to flee. (Ambar
Castillo, Washington City Paper
)Â
* An Army veteran and his wife in Zeeland, Michigan, are doing
everything they can to help the family of his friend and former
interpreter escape Afghanistan. (Jacqueline Francis, WOOD TV-8
)Â
* At San Diego State University, Phi Kappa Psi fraternity members
have raised more than $5,000 to help evacuees resettle in their new
homes via a GoFundMe called "Helping Hands for
Afghans." (Jayne Yutig, The Daily Aztec
)Â
* Chef Hamidullah Noori, a 2015 Special Immigrant Visa recipient
and owner of The Mantu restaurant in Richmond,
Virginia, is cooking Afghan meals for new arrivals: "That's the
best thing: to serve your community, to serve your people ... and to
serve your culture." (Maya Rodriguez, E.W. Scripps news service
)Â
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'GLIMMER OF HOPE'Â - ICYMI:Â "The World Health Organization on
Wednesday endorsed the world's first malaria vaccine,"Â reports Maria
Cheng of the Associated Press
. "Today's
recommendation offers a glimmer of hope for [Africa], which shoulders
the heaviest burden of the disease. And we expect many more African
children to be protected from malaria and grow into healthy adults,"
said Dr. Matshidiso Moeti, WHO's Africa director. "This is a huge
step forward," said Julian Rayner, director of the Cambridge Institute
for Medical Research. "It's an imperfect vaccine, but it will still
stop hundreds of thousands of children from dying."Â
Thanks for reading,Â
AliÂ
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