Bert Bayou counts himself among the
lucky ones.
He had completed his undergraduate
studies in politics and international
relations and was working for the
United Nations' World Food Programme
in Ethiopia when his mother pestered
him into applying for the Diversity Visa
Lottery Programme .
In 2000, after entering for the first time,
he "won".
Then 23-year-old Bayou, seeing it as his
best opportunity to pursue his graduate
studies, decided to take the next step
and apply for the visa to come to the
United States.
"I was young,I
didn't want to stay doing the same
thing that I was doing.
"I really wanted to continue working on
development projects and addressing
poverty, and most of the international
professionals that I knew working these
jobs at a higher level had graduate
degrees," Bayou continued.
Created by the 1990 Immigration
Reform Act, the Diversity Visa
Programme (DVP) selects 100,000
applicants in a lottery who are then
eligible to apply for a US residency visa.
After bring selected, the applicants go
through the same application, screening
and examination process as all
prospective immigrants who come to
the US. Only half complete the process
and are issued Green Cards.
The process is time intensive - as it
requires multiple certifications of
documents proving an applicant's
educational and work history - and, for
many, expensive.
The $330 fee for filing the visa is
sometimes multiple months' of an
applicant's salary, Anu Joshi, director of
immigration policy at the New York
Immigration Coalition.
The costs - both in money and time - of
translating a lottery win into a diversity
visa are most easily and often paid by
those who are highly educated,
research in 2012 on the effects of the
programme in Africa showed.
Far from a 'threat to national
security'
In the hours and days following
Sayfullo Saipov's alleged attackin New
York City two weeks ago, which left
eight people dead, US President Donald
Trump quickly called for the end of the
DVP, highlighting that Saipov, an Uzbek
national, was admitted to the US
through the programme.
Trump said it
was a "disaster
for our country"
and called for a
merit-based
programme. He
also promised to
increase "extreme vetting" of
immigrants.
Bayou said that diversity visa recipients
are far from the "threat to national
security" label Trump has used to
depict them. They're going to school,
getting married, raising kids, and
building a life for themselves, he said.
"That's the kind of immigration
programme you want to have
continue," he added.
Despite often having advanced degrees
from back home, Bayou said, many
immigrants accept low-wage jobs
outside of their profession, sometimes
multiple, and the possibility of
returning to school in order to pursue
to promise of opportunity in the United
States.
"My mom saw how her brothers
managed to get here, get their papers,
work small-paying, minimum-wage
jobs and go to school and then they
ended up having a good life, having a
good job and having a stable life and
living in peace," he said.
Still, many in the US wish to alter
immigration programmes.
Proposed changes to the US
immigration system - such as the RAISE
Act introduced by Senator Tom Cotton
and David Perdue in February 2017 -
would eliminate this pathway to US
residency and citizenship for 50,000
immigrants each year.
During a press conference, Cotton
dismissed the Diversity Visa Programme
as "outdated" and partially responsible
for making a "permanent underclass" of
both working-class Americans as well
as immigrants "for whom the American
Dream is always out of reach".
Cotton was also
critical of the
programme's
role in
"unlimited
chain
migration" of
families, as he
said visa
recipients can
"open up immigration no just to your
immediate family, but your extended
family, your village, your clan, your
tribe".
Roy Beck, founder and president of
NumbersUSA, a nonprofit that works
for immigration reduction, told Al
Jazeera there "may be a little more
chain migration going on with the visa
lottery because you're pulling people
out of places that haven't had a lot of
previous immigration … the fact is that
every kind of immigration you have is
multiplied by chain migration".
The American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU) has labelled NumbersUSA
"nativist" and accused Beck of close ties
to John Tanton, a far-right activist with
known connections to white nationalist
ideologues.
Beck said his organisation is bipartisan
and wants to limit immigration to
historic standards. He agrees with
Cotton that high levels of immigration
exacerbate the economic challenges of
the US working class, saying it has
nothing to do with their character, but
is an issue of "supply and demand" in
the labour market.
"More than anything, we want to
honour the tradition of America being a
place where everybody, no matter how
they're born, has some opportunity of
upward mobility," Beck said.
'How can you refuse?'
Some diversity visa recipients are
looking to help family members apply
while they still can, Jessica Greenberg, a
staff attorney at the African Services
Committee in New York, told Al
Jazeera.
As lottery
winners must
identify sponsors
in the United
States when
applying for a
visa, immigrants
will often apply on behalf of their
family back home, and immigrant
communities build strong ties to
support one another.
Greenberg said that while DVP
recipients are certainly worried about
the future of the programme, many are
frustrated and annoyed with what they
say appears to be more immigrant
scapegoating.
"The words I hear a lot are 'ridiculous'
and 'silly'", Greenberg said.
Most of the immigrants Greenberg has
spoken to "have just expressed their
gratitude that they're already here".
Still, the lottery is random and can
place winners in a difficult position.
Aschalew Asabie, who came to
Alexandria, Virginia, just outside of
Washington, DC, from Ethiopia in 2014,
had to give up on his studies when his
lottery number was chosen.
"I was half-way to graduation so it was
hard for me to decide to come," Asabie
told Al Jazeera.
But in the end, he said, that the choice
was clear.
"This is America," he said.
"The way I grew up, and especially for
Ethiopian people, it's unacceptable for
me to refuse this chance, because I'll
never get it again. You are so lucky,
how can you refuse that?"
Shifting blame
For Bayou, who became a US citizen in
2006, attempts to end the DVP are a
distraction from "the actual
perpetrators who are creating poverty
jobs here in the US and enriching
themselves".
After two years
living with his
uncles, Bayou
was admitted to
a graduate
programme at
Clark University
in Worcester,
Massachusetts,
completing his
master's degree
in international development and social
change.
Today, he is a labour organiser for
UNITE HERE in Washington, DC, and
while many of the workers he organises
are immigrants, some are working-class
US citizens.
"I work for labour unions," Bayou said,
"and I know that immigrants or US
citizens who work low-paying jobs are
struggling because companies don't
want to pay them the money they are
owed, not because immigrants are
coming here."
Attempts to "shift the blame to
immigrants" are a distraction that
protects those in power, Bayou claimed.
"We were invited to this country:
invited,And now,
to be seen as an enemy is really
heartbreaking."
Why are British Muslim marriages unprotected by law? FEATURE / ISLAM MUSLIM MARRIAGE IN THE UK 60 percent Muslim marriages religious-only, unregistered 28 percent do not realise Islamic ceremony not legally recognised 66 percent know union has no legal status 50 percent do not intend to have marriage legalised - Source: Channel 4 survey Aina Khan Aina Khan is a journalist focusing on race, faith and identity. She's reading a masters in religion in politics at SOAS. @ ainajkhan United Kingdom Islam Europe, Maureen, right, was not entitled to financial support after her husband Rashid - the father of her child - passed away [Courtesy: Maureen] London, England - When Maureen wed her husband Rashid in a Muslim ceremony in 1973 in Bradford, she knew that should the relationship fall apart, she would not be entitled to share his assets. Her marriage was sanctified in the eyes of God, but in the eyes of the state it was "unregistered", not legal, and so financial protection...
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