Log In


Reset Password
  • MENU
    Nation
    Thursday, October 31, 2024

    White House: U.S. to accept 10,000 Syrian refugees

    Syrian refugee child Jana Makkiyeh, 3, whose family comes from Damascus, Syria, holds a teddy bear while standing near her family's tent at a makeshift camp for asylum seekers in Roszke, southern Hungary, Thursday, Sept. 10, 2015. Leaders of the United Nations refugee agency warned Tuesday that Hungary faces a bigger wave of 42,000 asylum seekers in the next 10 days and will need international help to provide shelter on its border, where newcomers already are complaining bitterly about being left to sleep in frigid fields. (Muhammed Muheisen/AP Photo

    Washington  — The United States is making plans to accept 10,000 Syrian refugees in the coming budget year, a significant increase from the 1,500 migrants that have been cleared to resettle in the U.S. since civil war broke out in the Middle Eastern country more than four years ago, the White House said Thursday.

    The White House has been under pressure to do more than just provide money to help meet the humanitarian crisis in Europe. Tens of thousands of people from war-torn countries in the Middle East and Africa have risked their lives during desperate attempts to seek safe haven on the continent.

    White House spokesman Josh Earnest said about $4 billion that the administration has provided to relief agencies and others is the most effective way for the U.S. to help meet the crisis.

    But he told journalists that President Barack Obama has decided that admitting more Syrian refugees next year would help boost the U.S. response.

    The 2016 budget year begins Oct. 1.

    Comment threads are monitored for 48 hours after publication and then closed.