By Jenna Johnson and John Wagner
President-elect Donald Trump walks out of the clubhouse at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster in New Jersey. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
President-elect Donald Trump said Wednesday that the Ohio State student who plowed his car into a crowd and then slashed at people with a butcher knife was “a Somali refugee who should not have been in our country.”
Trump took to Twitter to respond to news that the Islamic State claimed a role in Monday’s campus attack, claiming that the perpetrator, Abdul Razak Ali Artan, was a “soldier” of the militant group.
It’s unclear from Trump’s tweet which of his proposals would have kept the Somali student, a refugee with permanent status, out of the country. In fall 2015, Trump pledged to kick all Syrian refugees out of the country and to bar others from entering. Days before the election, Trump said that he would not push out refugees without the consent of the community where they would be resettled.
n December 2015, he called for a ban on allowing most foreign Muslims into the country. His running mate and top aides now say that he has abandoned that proposal, even though it is still posted on his campaign website.
This spring, Trump shifted his rhetoric toward targeting countries instead of religion, saying that he would temporarily suspend “immigration from some of the most dangerous and volatile regions of the world that have a history of exporting terrorism.” In August, he called for “extreme, extreme vetting” of all immigrants that would include a Cold War-style ideological test to ensure that an immigrant’s views and values align with American ones.
Authorities have not established a motive in the attack at Ohio State. But the law enforcement investigation increasingly is focusing on the possibility that Artan was motivated by radical or terrorist influences, though he had no known contacts with the Islamic State or other overseas terror groups, a U.S. official said.
A U.S. official said Artan came to the U.S. from Somalia as a refugee in 2014, and stayed at least for a time in the Dallas area before moving to Columbus. He was a community college student in Columbus from 2014 to 2016 and transferred as a junior to Ohio State this semester.
Source: The Washington Post
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