Stranded Yemenis, thousands of others
stand to lose 'golden ticket' to U.S.
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[July 31, 2017]
By Riham Alkousaa and Yeganeh Torbati
NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Yemen is
urging the U.S. government to take in dozens of Yemenis who traveled to
Malaysia in recent months expecting to immigrate to the United States,
only to find themselves stranded by President Donald Trump's temporary
travel ban.
The ban, which was blocked by lower courts before being partially
reinstated by the Supreme Court in June, temporarily bars citizens of
Yemen and five other Muslim-majority countries with no "bona fide"
connections to the United States from traveling there.
The Supreme Court ruling sharply limited the number of people affected
by the ban. Largely unreported has been the fate of one group -
thousands of citizens of the six countries who won a randomized U.S.
government lottery last year that enabled them to apply for a so-called
green card granting them permanent residence in the United States.
In a stroke of bad luck for the lottery winners, the 90-day travel ban
will expire on Sept. 27, just three days before their eligibility for
the green cards expires. Given the slow pace of the immigration process,
the State Department will likely struggle to issue their visas in time.
A recent email from the U.S. government to lottery winners still
awaiting their visas warned "it is plausible that your case will not be
issuable" due to the travel ban.
The lottery attracts about 14 million applicants each year, many of whom
view it as a chance at the "American Dream." It serves as a potent
symbol of U.S. openness abroad, despite the fact that the chance of
success is miniscule - about 0.3 percent, or slightly fewer than 50,000,
of lottery entrants actually got a green card in 2015.
The program helps to foster an image of America "as a country which
welcomes immigrants and immigration from around the world, but also
especially from Africa," said Johnnie Carson, a former U.S. assistant
secretary of state for African affairs during the Obama administration.
Some former diplomats worry the travel ban's impact on the lottery could
tarnish that image of inclusiveness.
"Taking this away from people who have won it is the cruelest possible
thing this administration could do," said Stephen Pattison, a former
senior State Department consular official. "It makes us look petty and
cruel as a society."
Reuters spoke to dozens of lottery winners from Yemen, Iran and Syria,
including about 20 who are still waiting for their visas to be issued.
Many declined to be named so as not to risk their applications but
provided emails and other documents to help confirm their accounts.
They described having spent thousands of dollars on the application
process, and many said they had delayed having children, sold property
and turned down lucrative job offers at home because they assumed they
would soon be moving to the United States.
AN ARDUOUS JOURNEY
For Yemenis, the situation is particularly difficult. Because the United
States does not maintain a diplomatic post in Yemen, its citizens are
assigned to other countries to apply for their visas, and many of them
to travel to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The journey to a country 4,000
miles (6,400 km) away can be expensive and arduous for Yemenis, whose
country, the Middle East's poorest, is embroiled in a two-year conflict.
Most of the Yemenis who come to Malaysia make their first stop at a
high-rise apartment building on the outskirts of the capital, where they
have built a small community. Because of immigration restrictions, they
are not allowed to work and are slowly running out of money. Most
survive from funds donated by other Yemenis or sent by relatives back
home.
"Imagine you get notified you got the golden ticket, only to have it
yanked away," said Joshua Goldstein, a U.S. immigration attorney who
advises lottery winners.
The so-called "diversity visa" program was passed in its current form by
Congress in 1990 to provide a path to U.S. residency for citizens from a
range of countries with historically low rates of immigration to the
United States.
[to top of second column] |
Yemeni Rafek Ahmed Mohammed Al-Sanani (R), 22, and Abdel Rahman
Zaid, 26 look through documents as they speak with Reuters in
Serdang, on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia July 20, 2017.
REUTERS/Rozanna Latiff
Because it has relatively few educational or professional
requirements, it tends to attract people from poorer countries. In
Ghana and Sierra Leone, for instance, more than 6 percent of the
population in each of the West African nations entered the lottery
in 2015.
Yemeni officials in Washington launched talks with the State
Department this month to find a way to get dozens of Yemeni lottery
winners into the United States despite the travel ban, said Yemen's
ambassador to the United States, Ahmed bin Mubarak.
"They've been in Malaysia for more than six months and sold
everything in Yemen," bin Mubarak said. "We are doing what we can."
U.S. officials said they would work with Yemen's government to help
those who qualify for exceptions to the travel ban to be allowed in
on a case-by-case basis, said Mohammed al-Hadhrami, a diplomat at
Yemen's embassy in Washington.
A State Department official declined to comment on how the United
States was working with Yemen on the issue.
'YANKED AWAY'
It is unclear exactly how many lottery winners are now caught up in
the travel ban, which affects Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and
Yemen, but in 2015, more than 10,000 people from the six countries
won the lottery, and 4,000 of them eventually got visas.
Yemeni officials provided Reuters with a list of Yemeni lottery
winners, mostly in Malaysia, which they have also given to the State
Department. It showed 58 Yemenis still waiting for a response to
their applications, including some who have been stuck in security
checks for more than eight months.
The State Department declined to comment on the figures, but
departmental data shows that 206 Yemenis received diversity visas
between March and June.
Following the June 26 Supreme Court ruling, State Department
officials told lottery winners from the six countries that their
visas would not be granted during the 90-day period the travel ban
is in place unless they can demonstrate close family ties or other
approved connections to a person or institution in the United
States, according to an email seen by Reuters.
Yemeni officials are scrambling to help the country's lottery
winners demonstrate how they might qualify for an exemption and are
also pushing to get a waiver for those who don't have any
relationships, Hadhrami said.
Rafek Ahmed al-Sanani, a 22-year-old farmer with a high school
education, is among the Yemenis stuck in Malaysia. He traveled there
in December via a route that included a 22-hour bus ride followed by
flights to Egypt, Qatar and finally Malaysia.
"I was the first one to apply for the lottery in my family," said
Sanani, one of nine children in a family from Ibb governorate in
Yemen's north. "I want to come to the United States to learn English
and continue my studies."
Sanani said he had to borrow $10,000 to pay for his trip to Malaysia
and living expenses. As he waits to hear the outcome of his
application, he is resigned to his fate.
"What can I do?" he said. "I will accept reality."
(Additional reporting by Rozanna Latif in Kuala Lumpur and Yara
Bayoumy in Washington; Editing by Sue Horton and Ross Colvin)
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