Somali refugee Ahmed Omar Bihi said on Wednesday that he fears for his wife’s sanity following Donald Trump’s travel ban and accused the US president of “dismantling all our dreams”.
Trump’s executive order curbing immigration has sparked international outcry, provoking chaos for travellers and bewilderment among immigrants chasing the American Dream.
On Friday, the US president banned immigration from seven Muslim-majority countries – Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen – and put a four-month hold on allowing refugees into the United States.
Immigrants and refugees were kept off flights and left stranded in airports worldwide amid scenes of confusion and anger after the sudden clampdown.
Somali refugee Bihi, his wife Halay Hussein Barre, and their 10 children have been living in Kenya’s Kakuma refugee camp for nearly four years while their resettlement to the United States is processed.
“From the moment Trump came to power, her stress was increasing,” he said in a telephone interview from a transit centre in the camp, on Kenya’s arid northern border.
“Trump is dismantling all our dreams.”
Decade-long process
Some 26,000 refugees in Kenya have been affected by the ban, most of them Somali, said United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR) spokeswoman Yvonne Ndege. Resettlement from Kenya can take up to a decade, she said, due to extensive medical checks and interviews.
Bihi said his wife “went mad” in 2015 as their family was the only one left among hundreds taken to the transit centre in 2013 as part of a resettlement process.
“She fled from her home, she was beating up her children for nothing . . . Sometimes she slapped me,” said Bihi, adding that her condition had improved with medication.
The family was told the process would take six months, but he said they are still waiting almost four years later.
Bihi, now in his early 40s, said he fled Kismayo in Somalia as a teenager after his father, a prominent businessman, was murdered and the family’s property looted. He can never go home.
"This policy places the burden of hosting refugees on countries that are already overburdened," said Geno Teofilo, a spokesman for the Norwegian Refugee Council, as low- and mid-income countries house nine out of 10 of the world's displaced.
Resettlement approval
Half of the 26,000 refugees hit by the ban in Kenya have already won approval for US resettlement while the other half await interview by the US State Department, Ndege said.
"They are feeling shocked, depressed, despairing and heartbroken," she said from a transit centre in the capital, Nairobi, host to about 140 refugees who were due to fly out over the past few days.
Around half of the refugees in the transit centre are children, she said, several seriously sick.
“There are so many vulnerable people here in the transit centre, orphans . . . women and children who have experienced abuse, domestic abuse, sexual violence.”
Many people have been crying as they were poised to join family members in the United States and had already sold all their possessions ahead of the journey, she said.
“They don’t understand why America won’t take them after all these years of scrutiny,” she said. “They have one-way tickets out of here.”
Trump said the ban would help protect the United States from terrorism, with “extreme vetting” needed to protect the country.
Bihi said refugees from the seven banned countries should win priority resettlement because of the hardship they face at home.
“He must revoke this visa ban in order to save people like us,” he said. “We are stranded, we have nowhere to go.”
– (Reuters)