AP

African refugees see racial bias as US welcomes Ukrainians

Mar 31, 2022, 10:08 AM | Updated: Apr 1, 2022, 12:03 pm

Vera Arnot, of Kyiv, Ukraine, who currently attends college in Boston, stands for a photograph in f...

Vera Arnot, of Kyiv, Ukraine, who currently attends college in Boston, stands for a photograph in front of a mural, in Boston, Tuesday, March 29, 2022. Arnot, who hopes to apply for Temporary Protected Status, says TPS would allow her to seek a job off campus with potentially better pay and longer hours so she doesn’t have to rely on her family’s support amid the Russian invasion. Arnot said she hopes the program can be extended to other deserving nations as well. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

(AP Photo/Steven Senne)


              Vera Arnot, of Kyiv, Ukraine, who currently attends college in Boston, stands for a photograph in front of a mural, in Boston, Tuesday, March 29, 2022. Arnot, who hopes to apply for Temporary Protected Status, says TPS would allow her to seek a job off campus with potentially better pay and longer hours so she doesn’t have to rely on her family’s support amid the Russian invasion. Arnot said she hopes the program can be extended to other deserving nations as well. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
            
              Vera Arnot, of Kyiv, Ukraine, who currently attends college in Boston, stands for a photograph, in Boston, Tuesday, March 29, 2022. Arnot, who hopes to apply for Temporary Protected Status, says TPS would allow her to seek a job off campus with potentially better pay and longer hours so she doesn’t have to rely on her family’s support amid the Russian invasion. Arnot said she hopes the program can be extended to other deserving nations as well. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
            
              Vera Arnot, of Kyiv, Ukraine, who currently attends college in Boston, stands for a photograph in front of a mural, in Boston, Tuesday, March 29, 2022. Arnot, who hopes to apply for Temporary Protected Status, says TPS would allow her to seek a job off campus with potentially better pay and longer hours so she doesn’t have to rely on her family’s support amid the Russian invasion. Arnot said she hopes the program can be extended to other deserving nations as well. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
            
              Vera Arnot, of Kyiv, Ukraine, who currently attends college in Boston, stands for a photograph, in Boston, Tuesday, March 29, 2022. Arnot, who hopes to apply for Temporary Protected Status, says TPS would allow her to seek a job off campus with potentially better pay and longer hours so she doesn’t have to rely on her family’s support amid the Russian invasion. Arnot said she hopes the program can be extended to other deserving nations as well. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
            
              Vera Arnot, of Kyiv, Ukraine, who currently attends college in Boston, stands for a photograph in front of a mural, in Boston, Tuesday, March 29, 2022. Arnot, who hopes to apply for Temporary Protected Status, says TPS would allow her to seek a job off campus with potentially better pay and longer hours so she can help support loved ones, many of whom are unable to work during the Russian invasion. Arnot said she hopes the program can be extended to other deserving nations as well. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
            
              Vera Arnot, of Kyiv, Ukraine, who currently attends college in Boston, stands for a photograph, in Boston, Tuesday, March 29, 2022. Arnot, who hopes to apply for Temporary Protected Status, says TPS would allow her to seek a job off campus with potentially better pay and longer hours so she can help support loved ones, many of whom are unable to work during the Russian invasion. Arnot said she hopes the program can be extended to other deserving nations as well. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
            
              Karla Morales, of Revere, Mass., polishes a mirror while working at her families' party supply shop, in the East Boston neighborhood of Boston, Sunday, March 27, 2022. Morales, who left El Salvador with her family when she was 3 years old, and has been on Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, nearly her whole life, says the status has allowed her family to work, build a successful small business and pay taxes but without providing a pathway to citizenship. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
            
              Karla Morales, of Revere, Mass., inflates balloons while working at her families' party supply shop, in the East Boston neighborhood of Boston, Sunday, March 27, 2022. Morales, who left El Salvador with her family when she was 3 years old, and has been on Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, nearly her whole life, says the status has allowed her family to work, build a successful small business and pay taxes but without providing a pathway to citizenship. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
            
              Karla Morales, of Revere, Mass., stands for a photograph at an entrance to her families' party supply shop, in the East Boston neighborhood of Boston, Sunday, March 27, 2022. Morales, who left El Salvador with her family when she was 3 years old, and has been on Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, nearly her whole life, says the status has allowed her family to work, build a successful small business and pay taxes but without providing a pathway to citizenship. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
            
              Wilfred Tebah, who fled Cameroon during its ongoing conflict, poses for a photo in the backyard of his home, Thursday, March 31, 2022, in Columbus, Ohio. African refugees say the recent decision to grant Ukrainians fleeing war refugee status and other humanitarian protections underscores the racial bias inherent in American immigration policy. Tebah says he and other immigrants from Cameroon have long been deserving of similar humanitarian considerations. (AP Photo/Patrick Orsagos)
            
              Wilfred Tebah, who fled Cameroon during its ongoing conflict, poses for a photo in the backyard of his home, Thursday, March 31, 2022, in Columbus, Ohio. African refugees say the recent decision to grant Ukrainians fleeing war refugee status and other humanitarian protections underscores the racial bias inherent in American immigration policy. Tebah says he and other immigrants from Cameroon have long been deserving of similar humanitarian considerations. (AP Photo/Patrick Orsagos)

Wilfred Tebah doesn’t begrudge the U.S. for swiftly granting humanitarian protections to Ukrainians escaping Russia’s devastating invasion of their homeland.

But the 27-year-old, who fled Cameroon during its ongoing conflict, can’t help but wonder what would happen if the millions fleeing that Eastern Europe nation were a different hue.

As the U.S. prepares to welcome tens of thousands of Ukrainians fleeing war, the country continues to deport scores of African and Caribbean refugees back to unstable and violent homelands where they’ve faced rape, torture, arbitrary arrest and other abuses.

“They do not care about a Black man,” the Columbus, Ohio, resident said, referring to U.S. politicians. “The difference is really clear. They know what is happening over there, and they have decided to close their eyes and ears.”

Tebah’s concerns echo protests against the swift expulsions of Haitian refugees crossing the border this summer without a chance to seek asylum, not to mention the frosty reception African and Middle Eastern refugees have faced in western Europe compared with how those nations have enthusiastically embraced displaced Ukrainians.

In March, when President Joe Biden made a series of announcements welcoming 100,000 Ukrainian refugees, granting Temporary Protected Status to another 30,000 already in the U.S. and halting Ukrainian deportations, two Democratic lawmakers seized on the moment to call for similar humanitarian considerations for Haitians.

“There is every reason to extend the same level of compassion,” U.S. Reps. Ayanna Pressley, of Massachusetts, and Mondaire Jones, of New York, wrote to the administration, noting more than 20,000 Haitians have been deported despite continued instability after the assassination of Haiti’s president and a powerful earthquake this summer.

Cameroonian advocates have similarly ratcheted up their calls for humanitarian relief, protesting in front of the Washington residence of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and the offices of leading members of Congress this month.

Their calls come as hundreds of thousands in Cameroon have been displaced in recent years by the country’s civil war between its French-speaking government and English-speaking separatists, attacks by the terrorist group Boko Haram and other regional conflicts.

The advocacy group Human Rights Watch, in a February report, found many Cameroonians deported from the U.S. suffered persecution and human rights violations upon returning there.

Tebah, who is a leading member of the Cameroon American Council, an advocacy group organizing protests this month, said that’s a fate he hopes to avoid.

Hailing from the country’s English-speaking northwest, he said he was branded a separatist and apprehended by the government because of his activism as a college student. Tebah said he managed to escape, as many Cameroonians have, by flying to Latin America, trekking overland to the U.S.-Mexico border and petitioning for asylum in 2019.

“I will be held in prison, tortured and even killed if I am deported,” he said. “I’m very scared. As a human, my life matters too.”

The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees TPS and other humanitarian programs, declined to respond to the complaints of racism in American immigration policy. It also declined to say whether it was weighing granting TPS to Cameroonians or other African nationals, saying in a written statement only that it will “continue to monitor conditions in various countries.”

The agency noted, however, that it has recently issued TPS designations for Haiti, Somalia, Sudan and South Sudan — all African or Caribbean nations — as well as to more than 75,000 Afghans living in the U.S. after the Taliban takeover of that Central Asian nation. Haitians are among the largest and longest-tenured beneficiaries of TPS, with more than 40,000 currently on the status.

Other TPS countries include Burma, Honduras, Nepal, Nicaragua, Syria, Venezuela and Yemen, and the majority of the nearly 320,000 immigrants with Temporary Protected Status hail from El Salvador.

Lisa Parisio, who helped launch Catholics Against Racism in Immigration, argues the program could easily help protect millions more refugees fleeing danger but has historically been underused and overpoliticized.

TPS, which provides a work permit and staves off deportation for up to 18 months, doesn’t have limits for how many countries or people can be placed on it, said Parisio, who is the advocacy director for the Catholic Legal Immigration Network.

Yet former President Donald Trump, in his broader efforts to restrict immigration, pared down TPS, allowing designations for Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea in West Africa to expire.

Although programs like TPS provide critical protections for vulnerable refugees, they can also leave many in legal limbo for years without providing a pathway to citizenship, said Karla Morales, a 24-year-old from El Salvador who has been on TPS nearly her whole life.

“It’s absurd to consider 20 years in this country temporary,” the University of Massachusetts Boston nursing student said. “We need validation that the work we’ve put in is appreciated and that our lives have value.”

At least in the case of Ukraine, Biden appears motivated by broader foreign policy goals in Europe, rather than racial bias, suggests María Cristina García, a history professor at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, focused on refugees and immigrants.

But Tom Wong, founding director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Center at the University of California, San Diego, said the racial disparities couldn’t be clearer.

“The U.S. has responded without hesitation by extending humanitarian protections to predominately white and European refugees,” he said. “All the while, predominately people of color from Africa, the Middle East, and Asia continue to languish.”

Besides Cameroon, immigrant advocates also argue that Congo and Ethiopia should qualify for humanitarian relief because of their ongoing conflicts, as should Mauritania, since slavery is still practiced there.

And they complain Ukrainian asylum seekers are being exempted from asylum limits meant to prevent the spread of COVID-19 while those from other nations are being turned away.

“Black pain and Black suffering do not get the same attention,” says Sylvie Bello, founder of the D.C.-based Cameroon American Council. “The same anti-Blackness that permeates American life also permeates American immigration policy.”

Vera Arnot, a Ukrainian in Boston who is considering seeking TPS, says she didn’t know much about the special status until the war started and wasn’t aware of the concerns from immigrants of color. But the Berklee College of Music sophomore hopes the relief can be extended to other deserving nations.

Arnot says TPS could help her seek an off-campus job with better pay so she doesn’t have to rely on her family’s support, as most in Ukraine have lost their jobs due to the war.

“Ukrainians as a people aren’t used to relying on others,” she said. “We want to work. We don’t want welfare.”

For Tebah, who is staying with relatives in Ohio, TPS would make it easier for him to open a bank account, get a driver’s license and seek better employment while he awaits a decision on his asylum case.

“We’ll continue to beg, to plead,” Tebah said. “We are in danger. I want to emphasize it. And only TPS for Cameroon will help us be taken out of that danger. It is very necessary.”

___

Associated Press video journalist Patrick Orsagos in Columbus, Ohio contributed to this story.

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