Record numbers of Muslim refugees entered U.S. in 2016 says new study
As the nation and the White House
wrestle with complex immigration issues, some numbers to consider, including
the official total of refugees who arrived in U.S. in the last year, and how
Americans feel about the phenomenon. Three states took on many refugees; two
states had none. A record number of Muslims were among the new arrivals
according to new research.
“The U.S. admitted 84,995
refugees in the fiscal year ending in September 2016, the most in any year
during the Obama administration. An additional 31,143 refugees have been
admitted to the U.S. from Oct. 1 through Jan. 24, including more than 1,136
refugee admissions since Donald Trump became president on Jan.
20,” note Pew Research Center analysts Jens Manuel Krogstad and Jynnah
Radford, based on statistics from the U.S. State Department’s Refugee
Processing Center, plus historical data.
“Nearly 39,000 Muslim refugees
entered the U.S. in fiscal 2016, the highest number on record. Muslims made up
nearly half (46 percent) of refugee admissions, a higher share than for
Christians, who accounted for 44 percent of refugees admitted,” the analysis
stated.
“The U.S. public has seldom
approved of accepting large numbers of refugees. In October 2016, 54 percent of
registered voters said the U.S. does not have a responsibility to accept
refugees from Syria, while 41 percent said it does. There was a wide partisan
gap on this measure, with 87 percent of Donald Trump supporters
saying the U.S. doesn’t have a responsibility to accept Syrians, compared with
only 27 percent of Hillary Clinton supporters who said the
same. U.S. public opinion polls from previous decades show Americans have
largely opposed admitting large numbers of refugees from countries where people
are fleeing war and oppression,” the report said.
These days the highest number of
refugees from any nation came from the Democratic Republic of Congo (16,370
refugees) followed by Syria (12,587), Burma (12,347), Iraq (9,880) and Somalia
(9,020).
Where are the refugees now? California,
Texas and New York resettled nearly a quarter of the new arrivals. Other states
that received at least 3,000 refugees included Michigan, Ohio, Arizona, North
Carolina, Washington, Pennsylvania and Illinois. By contrast, Arkansas, the
District of Columbia and Wyoming each resettled fewer than 10 refugees.
Delaware and Hawaii took in no refugees.
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