A US judge denied for the second time a request by Texas to bar
relief agencies from bringing Syrian refugees into the state, a decision
that could have a bearing on the attempts of 30 other governors to
block refugees from their states.
US District Judge David Godbey said the Republican leaders who have
fought the resettlement have not shown Texas would suffer irreparable
harm. The same judge rejected in December the state's request for a
restraining order saying the evidence presented was "largely speculative
hearsay."
"The Court does not deny that the Syrian refugees pose some risk.
That would be foolish," Godbey wrote in the decision.
"In our country,
however, it is the federal executive that is charged with assessing and
mitigating that risk, not the states and not the courts."
Democratic President Barack Obama has pledged to take in 10,000
people fleeing war-torn Syria and has so far admitted 2,000 refugees.
Europe is dealing with millions of refugees fleeing conflict in the
Middle East and Africa.
After the Paris attacks in November, Texas Governor Greg Abbott, a
Republican, was one of the first of more than 30 US governors who are
seeking to block the resettlement of Syrians into their states.
Some legislators fear that Islamic State, which claimed credit for
the Paris attacks, will hide militants intent on carrying out more
killings among the influx of refugees entering the United States.
The federal government has tightened visa waiver rules for visitors
following the attacks in France that killed 130 people and immigration
has become a flashpoint in the November presidential election in
America.
Since the fiscal year 2011, 243 Syrian refugees have resettled in
Texas, a US court filing in December said, making the state one of the
main US relocation sites since the Syrian civil war erupted about five
years ago.
Since Obama took office in January 2009, the most populous
Republican-controlled state has filed suit against his administration 39
times on issues ranging from immigration to the environment to
abortion.
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