Mustafa is a 28-year-old from Iraq who once did construction on American military bases in his home country. He nearly lost his life several years ago when radical militias in his neighborhood found out and accused him of treason.
“I was beaten and shot and knifed,” says Mustafa, who didn’t want his full name published.*
Mustafa fled to neighboring Lebanon and applied for asylum in the United States. Like all refugees coming to the U.S., he submitted to years of interviews and investigations into his background. In January, he was close to getting a green light to fly to California—and begin his new life in America.
But his hopes were dashed, at least for the moment, when President Donald Trump issued an executive order on January 27 temporarily barring all refugee admissions and banning immigration of any kind for 90 days from seven majority-Muslim countries: Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen.
“If I do get rejected,” Mustafa says, struggling not to weep, “I’d regret ever having shaken hands with an American.”