In order to be eligible, applicants must be experiencing a “compelling emergency” with “an urgent humanitarian reason or significant public benefit to allowing you to temporarily enter the United States,” according to USCIS.
A USCIS spokesperson specified that it would not be able to approve applications for people currently in Afghanistan, because the U.S. no longer has an embassy or consulate there. However, leaving is difficult. Aid groups estimate thousands of Afghans are crossing illegally into Iran and Pakistan every day, and 500,000 were deported back to Afghanistan in the second half of last year, according to the United Nations.
To have a shot, applicants must also provide evidence that they individually face harm. Some examples given by USCIS include a media, government, or non-profit report specifically naming a person and spelling out why they face harm. Attorneys said that standard is higher than other humanitarian visa programs, and one that people fleeing persecution may have a nearly impossible time meeting. Finally, priority is given to those with immediate relatives already in the United States.
“There have been denials of those applications for the very reasons of lack of evidence, of people not having documentation or statements,” said Steven Larín, Deputy Director at Nationalities Service Center, which is assisting Afghans arriving in Philadelphia.
So far, only 160 of those 40,000 humanitarian parole applications have been approved for Afghans who applied from abroad, a USCIS spokesperson said. Another 930 were denied.
The agency stressed that parole was never supposed to replace the U.S. refugee resettlement program, and is only appropriate in “limited circumstances.”
Jason Hartwig, a veteran of Middle East wars and Ph.D. student in Philadelphia, has helped about 10 people in Afghanistan apply for humanitarian parole. He said he tries to be brutally honest about the odds of success.
“This is like a very low probability chance right now … But, I mean, what are you gonna say to someone in this position? They’re going to take that one percent chance,” he said.
The glacial pace and high number of denials have started getting attention. Late last month, Democrats and one Independent on the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee sent a letter to the Biden Administration, criticizing the denial rate and saying the standards to qualify are unreasonably high.
Earlier this week, the federal government announced it would open a processing center in Qatar to try to speed up processing for at-risk Afghans. It’s not clear how applicants for humanitarian parole will be processed, and if they will be redirected to apply for refugee status. That program takes on average two years, according to the National Immigration Forum, and currently has a lengthy backlog.
Alaha Abdul Faruq, whose cousins are still in hiding, said “time is a luxury right now,” and one they cannot afford. In December, the Taliban visited her aunt and uncle’s house, looking for their sons.