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Muslim refugees to U.S. have decreased in 2017

Christians made up the majority of refugees admitted to the United States in the first five full months of the Trump administration, reversing a trend that saw Muslims entering the country in higher numbers under President Obama, a new Pew Research report shows.

Out of all the refugees who arrived between President Trump’s inauguration and June 30, about half were Christians and 38 percent were Muslims, according to recently released data.

But when monthly figures are viewed, the data (originally from the U.S. State Department) reveals a steady decline for Muslims, from about 50 percent of refu­gees in February to 31 percent in June.

This comes at a time when the origin of most of the world’s refugees continues to be Muslim-majority countries. According to the UN Refugee Agency, Syria continues to account for a significant proportion of newly displaced refugees, with more than half of all new refugees worldwide fleeing the conflict in that country. Afghanistan and So­malia also top the list.

Not so in the United States.

“As whole, we look at fiscal 2017 since October, and Muslims and Christians are about the same number,” said Phillip Connor, a cowriter of the report. “But seeing the shift month to month was somewhat surprising. . . . It is a growing increase. It’s not just that there was an immediate shift.”

In the wake of Trump’s executive orders restricting travel to the United States from seven—and under the revised travel ban, six—majority-Muslim countries, the report said, “the religious affiliation of refugees has come under scrutiny.”

Yet the specific cause of this year’s changes can’t be fully explained. Some refugees now arriving on U.S. shores likely applied for resettlement when Obama was still in office.

Muslim refugees to the United States outnumbered Christians only three times between 2002 and 2016: in 2005, 2006, and 2016, which saw a record number of Muslims (38,901).

Additionally, while Somalia and Syria were leading countries of origin for refugees prior to April, now only Iraq remains among the top six nations, in addition to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Burma, Ukraine, Bhutan, and Eritrea.

Refugee admissions to the United States in fiscal year 2017 (which ends September 30) are expected to fall below the 85,000-person ceiling established by the Obama administration for fiscal 2016, the report said. —Religion News Service

A version of this article, which was edited on July 31, appears in the August 16 print edition under the title “Muslim refugees to U.S. have decreased in 2017.”

Madeleine Buckley

Madeleine Buckley writes for Religion News Service.

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