The United States will allow some Central American children to apply for refugee status from their home countries, as Washington seeks to stem a large, clandestine influx of minors, Vice President Joe Biden said Friday.
The program, which begins in early December, only applies to children from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras with at least one parent who is a legal resident of the United States.
"It provides those seeking asylum a right way to come to our country, as opposed to crossing the border illegally," Biden said at a Central American conference at the Inter-American Development Bank.
The children, who must be single and under the age of 21, must first pass through a strict interview process in their home country and meet several other requirements in order to join their family in America.
"The refugee/parole program will not be a pathway for undocumented parents to bring their children to the United States, but instead, the program will provide certain vulnerable, at-risk children an opportunity to be reunited with parents lawfully resident in the United States," according to official guidelines.
The estimated 11.7 million immigrants currently residing illegally in the United States will therefore not be eligible for the program.
The initiative follows a crisis triggered by a wave of more than 68,000 children, most from Central America, who illegally crossed the U.S. border unaccompanied by adults in the past 12 months, fleeing violence and poverty in their home countries.
Many of these children have applied for asylum upon arrival in the United States, but the new program would offer families a safe and legal alternative.
Children who do not qualify for refugee status could still apply for a permit to temporarily live in the U.S., without an opportunity for legalization.
"We are very happy," Guatemalan President Otto Perez told reporters after Biden's announcement.
Accompanied by the three Central American leaders, Biden also unveiled a development plan for the region to which the United States will contribute.
Meanwhile, an influential U.S. lawmaker said advisors had drafted measures for President Barack Obama to sign to prevent the deportation of up to five million undocumented immigrants.
"We do not know how many will benefit, maybe four or five million," Democratic Representative Luis Gutierrez said during a visit with undocumented immigrants who have been on a hunger strike for 12 days outside the White House.
But he stressed that the president's plan "will not solve the problems of all immigrants."
"Only Congress can pass a comprehensive law. We cannot keep waiting, so the president is acting using his constitutional powers," Gutierrez said, speaking in Spanish.
The move would allow many parents of children who are U.S. citizens or legal residents to obtain work permits, thereby eliminating the threat of being discovered and separated from their families.
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