Foreign Service Officers briefed on possible impacts

US Immigration Policy

Staff of the Foreign Service Institute of the Foreign Affairs Ministry were on Monday, briefed on the possible effects of current United States (US) administration immigration policies.

Vice Chancellor and Principal of the University of Guyana, Professor Ivelaw Griffith addressing staff of the Foreign Service Institute
Vice Chancellor and Principal of the University of Guyana, Professor Ivelaw Griffith addressing staff of the Foreign Service Institute

The presentation, according to a report from the Government Information Agency (GINA), was held in the boardroom of the Agriculture Ministry and was made by Vice Chancellor and Principal of the University of Guyana, Professor Ivelaw Griffith, titled “The emerging Trump Administration Foreign Policy and dynamics related to Guyana and the Caribbean”.

Director of the Foreign Service Institute, Ambassador Ronald Austin, explained that recent decisions on immigration by US President Donald Trump, “will have an immediate impact on our lives.”

He said, “We have to, I think first of all, in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and I think throughout the Government of Guyana, decide how we respond to the emergence of President Trump and the consequences of his policies.”

Last week, the US Department of Homeland Security revealed plans for the enforcement of immigration laws that have been deemed aggressive and discriminatory against Muslims.

According to CNN, the “guidance memos expand the Federal Government’s ability to empower state and local law enforcement agencies to perform the functions of immigration officers, no National Guard troops will be deployed to round up immigrants in the US.”

Ambassador Austin stated that, “This is not abstract foreign policy, this is direct consequences of a man who has decided to change the way the United States sees the world, and in particular as far as the immigrant population is concerned in the United States.”

US President Trump is likely to sign a new immigration executive order on Wednesday, a day after addressing lawmakers at a joint session of Congress.