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July 20, 2010
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Immigration News

 

New NAM Column To Cover Immigrants Who Have Disappeared


After spending over eight years in limbo in a California detention center without access even to a bail hearing, Harpal Singh, a Sikh, desperately chooses to be deported back to India where he had been tortured years before. Why?

Harpal Singh’s story marks the debut of “Disappeared in America,” a new, regular column in New America Media’s website. It will profile some of the people lost in the post-9/11 national security system and show how the issue cuts across all immigrant groups.

Immigrant detainees are the fastest growing prison population in America. Cases of people languishing in indefinite detention or deported under questionable circumstances have increased exponentially since 9/11.

They have disappeared from their daily lives and jobs as taxi drivers, store owners, neighbors, fathers and students, due to homeland security measures or harsher immigration law enforcement. This is the missing story in the heated immigration debate.

“This column is a coming together of those in the frontlines of this issue – ethnic media and immigration advocacy groups,” says Sandy Close, executive editor of New America Media.

The idea of the column came out of a gathering of ethnic media editors and publishers in Los Angeles, who were struck by the commonality of the stories of immigrants grappling with the Department of Homeland Security. These editors and publishers can use the column in their own media.

New America Media will tap ethnic media and immigration advocacy groups around the country to uncover more stories of ordinary people gone missing in America.

“The series will draw attention to the individual and put a human face to some of the larger trends of the immigration and detention system,” says Camille Taiara, editor for Disappeared in America.

 

 

Our Virginia Immigration Lawyers can help you with all of your immigration litigation. Contact us now and obtain a free consultation!

 

 
Did You Know?    
 
 
Grants of TPS are initially made for periods of 6 to 18 months
Temporary Protected Status (TPS) - Establishes a legislative basis for allowing a group of persons temporary refuge in the United States. Under a provision of the Immigration Act of 1990, the Attorney General may designate nationals of a foreign state to be eligible for TPS with a finding that conditions in that country pose a danger to personal safety due to ongoing armed conflict or an environmental disaster. Grants of TPS are initially made for periods of 6 to 18 months and may be extended depending on the situation. Removal proceedings are suspended against aliens while they are in Temporary Protected Status.

 


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Latest news about Immigration cases in Virginia and nationwide:

Southern Californians Demand Citizenship
Along with the ACLU and CAIR, Ten Area Residents File a Class Action Lawsuit

LOS ANGELES - On behalf of a U.S. military veteran, a medical ...

Read more >


United States and Mexico Resume Voluntary Interior Repatriation Program
 WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) today announced that the Governments of Mexico and the United States are re...
Read more >


Canadian man sentenced in record $2.43 million cash smuggling
DETROIT - A Canadian man was sentenced yesterday for smuggling a record $2.43 million cash into the United States, the result of an investigat...
Read more >


More Immigration News >

 
 

Immigration Terms

 


Today's Terms

Foreign Government Official

Definition:
As a nonimmigrant class of admission, an alien coming temporarily to the United States who has been accredited by a foreign government to function as an ambassador, public minister, career diplomatic or consular officer, other accredited official, or an attendant, servant or personal employee of an accredited official, and all above aliens’ spouses and unmarried minor (or dependent) children.

Refugee

Definition:
Any person who is outside his or her country of nationality who is unable or unwilling to return to that country because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution.

Nonimmigrant temporary worker classes O-1, O-2, O-3

Definition:
Temporary workers with extraordinary ability or achievement in the sciences, arts, education, business, or athletics; those entering solely for the purpose of accompanying and assisting such workers; and their spouses and children

More Immigration Terms >

 

Immigration Resources

 


Search Immigration resources in our resource center:

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Immigration Hot Topics

 
Topics Related to Immigration:

  • NAFTA Applications
  • Intra-company Transferee (L-1) Petitions
  • Specialty Worker (H-1B) Petitions
  • Treaty Investor (E-2) Visas

More Immigration Topics >

Virginia Immigration Attorney

 
If you live in the following cities and need an Immigration attorney you should contact our Immigration Attorney as soon as possible:

  • Alexandria
  • Annandale
  • Arlington
  • Ashburn
  • Blacksburg
  • Burke
  • Centreville
  • Charlottesville
  • Chesapeake
  • Chester
  • Chesterfield
  • Christiansburg
  • Colonial Heights
  • Culpeper
  • Danville
  • Dumfries
  • Fairfax
  • Falls Church
  • Fredericksburg
  • Front Royal
  • Glen Allen
  • Hampton
  • Harrisonburg
  • Herndon
  • Hopewell
  • Leesburg
  • Lorton
  • Lynchburg
  • Manassas
  • Martinsville
  • Mc Lean
  • Mechanicsville
  • Midlothian
  • Newport News
  • Norfolk
  • Petersburg
  • Portsmouth
  • Powhatan
  • Radford
  • Reston
  • Richmond
  • Roanoke
  • Salem
  • Spotsylvania
  • Springfield
  • Stafford
  • Staunton
  • Sterling
  • Suffolk
  • Vienna
  • Virginia Beach
  • Waynesboro
  • Williamsburg
  • Winchester
  • Woodbridge
  • Yorktown
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