The Forum Daily, formerly Noorani's Notes
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THE FORUM DAILY
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A recent report from the
Government Accountability Office (GAO) shows that CBP agents
significantly undercounted immigrant deaths, "with the number of people
dying likely twice as high as previously reported," Stuart Anderson,
executive director of the National Foundation for American Policy,
writes in Forbes
.Â
"CBP [Customs and Border Protection] has not collected and recorded, or
reported to Congress, complete data on migrant deaths or disclosed
associated data limitations," according to the GAO report. Â
The data reveal that the Tucson sector reported fewer migrant deaths in
the Border Patrol's Border Safety Initiative Tracking System (BSITS)
than Arizona's OpenGIS Initiative for Deceased Migrants system between
fiscal years 2015 through 2019: 0nly "339 reported by the Border Patrol
vs. 699 for the Pima County Medical Examiner's Office and Humane
Borders," notes Anderson. "That would represent an undercount of 360, or
72 immigrant deaths per year in the Tucson sector alone."Â
An undercount of migrant deaths at this scale "should be a wake-up call
to Congress," he writes. "The current enforcement-only policies or even
harsher versions of those policies will bring more death and tragedy."Â
In other pressing border news, CBS News
'
Camilo Montoya-Galvez reports that the Biden administration is preparing
19,000 beds at shelters and housing sites in anticipation of an increase
in unaccompanied minors seeking asylum amid the forthcoming Title 42
lift
.Â
As we noted last week
,
we need to think larger than Title 42 - and hone in on lasting border
and immigration solutions, which balance security and compassion.Â
Welcome toâ¯Wednesday's editionâ¯of The Forum Daily. If you have a
story to share from your own community, please sendâ¯itâ¯to me at
[email protected] .
And if you know others who'd like to receive this newsletter, please
spread the word. They can subscribe here.
Â
FAITH RESPONSE - Speaking of balancing security and compassion, about
200 evangelical leaders gathered yesterday under the umbrella of the
National Association of Evangelicals, World Relief, the Evangelical
Immigration Table, and the Alliance for a New Immigration Consensus
urging Congress to pass immigration reforms, Jeff Brumley reports for
Baptist News Global
.
"We want to see people who are made in the image of God be treated with
dignity, with decency, with honor, with respect," said Derwin Gray, lead
pastor of Transformation Church in Indian Land, South Carolina, as part
of a two-day fly-in with U.S. senators, their staff, and organizers.
"Our prayer and our hope [are] that there would be smart, reasonable
immigration reform that not only secures our borders, but also secures
the dignity and worth of human beings."Â Â
'WE MISS OUR COUNTRY'- Naseema Ahmadzai and her family celebrated
their first Ramadan away from home in Miami with mixed feelings, reports
The Miami Herald
's
Michelle Marchante. "It's difficult. We miss our country. We miss our
homeland, of course, we miss our people," said Amhadzai. "But still,
when we see our community, our Muslim brothers and sisters here ...
I'm grateful, I'm very excited." Meanwhile, Roll Call's Caroline
Simon reports on Twitter that GOP Sens. Lindsey Graham
(South Carolina), Rob Portman
(Ohio), and other senators from both parties "seem open to the [White
House] Afghan Adjustment Act proposal. But whether it'll make it into
the Ukraine funding bill is a different question."Â
Other stories of local welcome:Â Â
* Students at St. John Catholic School in Georgetown, Kentucky, raised
$3,369.50 and other goods for Afghan refugees and donated the proceeds
to Kentucky Refugee Ministries. (Emily Perkins, Georgetown News-Graphic
)Â
* A newly formed nonprofit in Burlington called The Vermont Afghan
Alliance aims to "bridge the gap between the Afghan population and state
and local service providers" and "serve as a designated community space
for Afghans to come together during traditional holidays, gatherings and
religious services." (Cam Smith, WCAX
)Â
CUBAN MIGRANTS - Migrants from Cuba are traveling to the U.S. by foot
in record numbers - compared to four decades ago - with an estimated
150,000 expected to arrive this year alone, per senior American
officials, report Maria Abi-Habib and Eileen Sullivan of The New York
Times
.
Political repression, a lack of economic opportunities, and a new
visa-free travel policy in Nicaragua, are forcing Cubans to flee and
seek asylum elsewhere. According to CBP data, almost 79,000 Cubans have
arrived at the southern border since October, which is more than the
total in the past two years combined. To remedy the situation, the U.S.
and Cuba recently had high-level talks on the need to restore regular
migration channels.Â
**MYSTERY**
**SOLVED**- For almost a decade, Ayda Zugay has been searching for a
woman named Tracy, who gifted her and her sister an envelope with $100
after fleeing the former Yugoslavia, reports Catherine E. Shoichet of
CNN
.
"I want to be able to find Tracy to thank her for her generosity, for
her kindness, for her empathy, and for welcoming my sister and I," Zugay
said in a recent video on Twitter
.
Thirty-four hours after CNN published the story - and with the help of
two of Tracy's close contacts - Zugay was able to connect with Tracy
over Zoom, wrote Shoichet in a touching follow-up story
.
"I just want to encourage everybody in the world to just be kind. What
does it hurt? Except it helps everyone..." Tracy said. "So, I'm very,
very thankful that I have found you girls, that you have found me."Â
AREPAS - For the Associated Press
,
Regina Garcia Cano shows how Venezuelan immigrants have inspired Mexican
cities to bring their traditional cuisines to life. "The Venezuelan
diaspora has brought shops selling arepas - stuffed corn cakes common
to that country and neighboring Colombia," writes Garcia Cano. "They
also are increasingly filling their fellow immigrants' yearning for
cachitos, empanadas and pastelitos while earning much-needed money."
It's a win-win situation: "They feel the warmth of Venezuela when they
see these (foods)," said Nelson Banda, who now sells food outside the
Venezuelan Embassy in Mexico. And ... "everyone sets up their own
business in their own way and sells what they can."Â
Thanks for reading,Â
AliÂ
Â
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