immigrant refugee justice

Posts Tagged ‘immigrant refugee justice’

Understanding Peace Prospects with Korea

Understanding Peace Prospects with Korea: Korean Peace Treaty Key to a Nuclear Free Northeast Asia. Join Peace Action NYS for an informative hour about the history of the conflict and the status of peace possibilities with North and South Korea.  The hour will include a question-and-answer session.

 

Speaker Hyun Lee is the U.S. National Organizer for Women Cross DMZ and Korea Peace Now–a global women-led campaign to end the Korean War. Previously, she was a writer for ZoominKorea, an associate of the Korea Policy Institute, and a co-producer of the radio show, Asia Pacific Forum.  She has a Bachelor’s and Master’s from Columbia.

 

Email Janine Moon moonjn@gmail.com for ZOOM Link.

Article 18: Freedom of Religion or Belief

Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) says we all have the right to our own beliefs, to have a religion, have no religion, or to change it. For its time, the UDHR was very progressive in asserting that believers of all religions and secular beliefs should be able to live peacefully with their rights guaranteed by the State, while not presuming any national or state-sponsored religion.

Day of Action for Afghan Humanitarian Parole

The WNY Peace Center is one of more than 200 organizations who have joined Project ANAR in a letter to the Biden administration and key Members of Congress, calling for the government to adjudicate applications favorably until it creates a special parole program for Afghans, and maintain pathways for safe passage.

 

We need your help pushing the government to act to meet the demands in this letter, by using this toolkit to make calls to your Members of Congress: Approve Afghan HP Toolkit http://ow.ly/Jx2n50HcyY5

 

“Afghans have filed more than 30,000 applications for Humanitarian Parole, in an attempt to access one of the only pathways available to them to seek refuge and family reunification in the U.S. The U.S. government has shifted resources and has more than 30 staff members focused solely on adjudicating Afghan Humanitarian Parole applications, but instead of using their wide discretion to grant parole to Afghans, they’re denying applications. This is unacceptable.

 

The U.S. owes a duty to Afghans, not just because they have suffered the consequences of decades of foreign intervention and occupation, but also because Afghans have utilized one of the only pathways available to them, and handed over millions of dollars to USCIS in the form of the $575 per person application fee. Until the U.S. creates a categorical pathway to meet the immense need in this emergent situation, Afghans will continue to file Humanitarian Parole applications, and it’s now on the government to act swiftly to grant parole and ensure safe passage for Afghans.

 

We’ve seen the government lay out a plan that unnecessarily and arbitrarily makes this process more difficult for Afghans, and in the last two weeks we’ve seen that result in what we’ve feared–parole denials. It doesn’t have to be this way — in fact USCIS’s own guidance allows them to grant parole for circumstances including generalized violence.”