Department of Justice
Immigration and Naturalization Service
FACT SHEETU.S.
Asylum and Refugee Policy
10/29/98
The United States offers asylum and refugee protection
based on an inherent belief in human rights and in ending or preventing the persecution of
individuals. Asylum is a precious and important protection granted by federal law to
qualified applicants who are unable or unwilling to return to their country of nationality
because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution. Claims of persecution must
be based on at least one of five internationally recognized grounds: race, religion,
nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion. The Illegal
Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 provided that some actions
taken under coercive population control programs constitute persecution on account of
political opinion. A maximum of 1,000 aliens per fiscal year may be granted asylum or
admitted as a refugee under this provision.
In addition to asylum and refugee protection, withholding
of removal is available to refugees in the United States who can show a likelihood their
lives or freedom would be threatened if they were returned to the country in question.
Withholding of removal is in some ways similar to asylum, but is governed by a higher
standard, requiring applicants to establish that it is more likely than not that they
would be persecuted. Unlike asylum, however, once this standard is met, there is no
discretion to deny withholding and the applicant may not be returned to the country.
Asylum /Refugee Application Process
Asylum and refugee applicants are both adjudicated under
the same legal standard, but differ in terms of where they are located. The potential
asylee is in the United States or applying for admission at a port of entry, and the
potential refugee is outside the United States. Aliens in the United States or at a port
of entry can apply for asylum by filing an Application for Asylum, Form I-589, with either
the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) or the Executive Office for Immigration
Review (EOIR), the Department of Justice agency that comprises the immigration courts and
Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA). Applicants can obtain a Form I-589 and filing
instructions from an asylum office, an INS district office or by calling the INS toll-free
request line at 1-800-870-3676. A Form I-589 must be filed within one year after the
alien's arrival in the United States, unless there exist changed circumstances affecting
the applicant's eligibility for asylum, or extraordinary circumstances relating to the
delay in filing. People overseas who are eligible for consideration by the U.S.
refugee program apply by filing a Registration for Classification as a Refugee, Form
I-590.
"Affirmative" Asylum Applications With INS
An alien who is in the United States and who is not in
immigration proceedings may apply for asylum by filing a Form I-589 with the appropriate
INS regional Service Center by mail. The Service Center sends the applicant a receipt
notice and refers the applicant to one of eight asylum offices around the country. The
offices are staffed by approximately 300 specially trained members of the Asylum Officer
Corps (AOC), which has been adjudicating asylum applications filed with INS since 1991.
Asylum claims brought before the AOC are "affirmative" applications filed
voluntarily by the alien. If an asylum officer denies the asylum application of an alien
in lawful status, the applicant can reapply for asylum if he/she is later placed in
removal proceedings before an immigration judge. Aliens who are in unlawful status and
cannot be granted asylum by the AOC are referred to an immigration judge, before whom they
can again raise their asylum claim. Affirmative asylum applicants are not placed in
detention while their application is considered.
Although the Form I-589 is an application for both asylum
and withholding of removal, generally it is immigration judges, and not asylum officers,
who adjudicate applications for withholding of removal during removal proceedings in which
it has been determined that an alien is removable.
"Defensive" Asylum Applications With EOIR
The Executive Office for Immigration Review has exclusive
jurisdiction over the cases of aliens who are placed in removal proceedings and then seek
asylum. Asylum claims filed before EOIR are "defensive" applications raised in
removal proceedings before immigration judges as a defense against removal. Aliens who
seek asylum as a defense against removal may be detained for being in the United
States illegally until an immigration judge rules on their asylum claim. Their detention,
however, is not due to their asylum claim.
Asylum Process for Certain Arriving Aliens
The 1996 law mandates that aliens who arrive at a U.S.
port of entry without travel documents or who engage in fraud or material
misrepresentation be detained and placed in expedited removal. Aliens who express or
indicate a fear of persecution during the expedited removal process receive a
"credible fear" interview with an INS asylum officer. Aliens found to
have a credible fear are referred for ordinary removal proceedings in which they may apply
for asylum before an immigration judge. Aliens determined to have a credible fear are
detained because they remain in removal proceedings until an immigration judge rules on
their asylum claim. Their detention also is not due to their asylum claim.
Parole
INS district directors have discretionary authority to
parole, or release, an alien in proceedings from detention. In determining whether release
is appropriate on a case-by-case basis, district directors must decide whether the alien's
release would serve an urgent humanitarian need or significant public benefit and whether
the alien has established his/her identity, poses a threat to the community, demonstrates
family ties in the community, presents evidence of a credible asylum claim, or poses a
risk of flight. Different, more restrictive criteria govern the custody of certain
criminal aliens.
Overseas Refugee Processing
Each year the President, in consultation with Congress,
determines the number of refugees who may be admitted to the United States during the
coming fiscal year. This annual ceiling is divided among five regional sub-ceilings --
Africa, East Asia, Europe, Latin America/Caribbean and the Near East/South Asia. For
fiscal 1999, the President and Congress have determined that up to 78,000 refugees may be
admitted to the United States, with those admissions allocated among the five regions as
follows:
- Africa...............................................................................12,000
- East
Asia........................................................................... 9,000
- Europe (includes 3,000
unfunded)...............................48,000
- Latin
America/Caribbean...............................................3,000
- Near East/South
Asia......................................................4,000
- Unallocated........................................................................2,000
The Europe, Bosnia and former Soviet Union ceiling
includes 3,000 unfunded numbers allocated to the former Soviet Union for use as needed,
provided that resources within existing appropriations are available to fund the cost of
their admission. The 2,000 unallocated numbers will be allocated as needed to meet
regional shortfalls. Unused admissions numbers from one region may be transferred to
another region where the need for admissions numbers exceeds the sub-ceiling.
Access to the U.S. refugee program is not
open-ended. To file a Form I-590, a refugee applicant must first be found to be eligible
for a refugee interview. The question of whether applicants are eligible for a refugee
interview is governed by their nationality and whether they come under one of the
processing priorities used to manage the U.S. refugee program. Like the setting of the
admissions' ceiling, the designation of eligible nationalities and processing priorities
is decided annually as part of the consultations process.
Traditionally, refugee applicants are
interviewed in third countries after having fled their country of persecution. Individuals who have fled their country and believe themselves to
be at risk if returned should contact the nearest office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). That office will make a decision as to whether the
individuals require protection and where that protection may be provided. The U.S. legal definition of refugee also allows for
in-country refugee processing in countries so designated by the President. For fiscal
1999, the U.S. refugee program will operate in-country programs in Havana, Ho Chi Minh
City and Moscow. Those eligible for Moscow processing are nationals or habitual residents
of the former Soviet Union as it existed on September 2, 1991.
--INS--