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Sisters who faced deportation to Armenia return home to Las Vegas

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  • Sisters who faced deportation to Armenia return home to Las Vegas

    LasVegas Sun, NV
    Jan 30 2005



    Sisters who faced deportation to Armenia return home to Las Vegas

    By CHRISTINA ALMEIDA
    ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LAS VEGAS (AP) - Two teenage sisters who spent more than two weeks
    awaiting deportation to a country they haven't seen since they were
    toddlers returned home Friday after being released from immigration
    custody.

    "It feels great. I'm so happy to see my family," said Emma Sarkisian,
    18, who was surrounded by family and friends at her father's pizza
    shop in Henderson.

    Sarkisian and her sister Mariam, 17, had been held at a Los Angeles
    immigration center since Jan. 14.

    Although the sisters were born in what is now known as Armenia, they
    were raised in the United States after their father emigrated from
    the former Soviet Union in 1991.

    The sisters' residency status was not discovered until a trip to the
    Department of Motor Vehicles. After meeting with immigration
    officials in Las Vegas, they learned they faced an outstanding
    deportation order. Until then, the family thought the sisters were
    properly documented.

    They were taken into custody after they complied with a summons to
    report to the local immigration office. There they learned they were
    being sent to Armenia, a place where they have no family and hadn't
    seen since they were 3- and 4-year-olds.

    "It was terrible," Emma Sarkisian said, recalling her despair about
    being sent to Armenia. "How am I going to go back? I don't read. I
    don't write. I don't speak."

    Immigration officials agreed late Thursday to release the sisters
    into their father's custody after Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., asked
    Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge to give the case "personal
    attention."

    "We've thoroughly reviewed the case and have decided based on
    humanitarian reasons to release them," said Virginia Kice,
    Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokeswoman. "This doesn't convey
    any legal immigration status on them."

    "ICE will continue to review the case," she said.

    The girls' father, Rouben Sarkisian, is a legal resident, who can
    file for citizenship and then seek residency status for his
    daughters.

    Mariam Sarkisian expressed gratitude for being reunited with her
    family and away from the detention center in Los Angeles.

    "It was horrible," Sarkisian said. "You just think about your family,
    the stuff you really don't appreciate until it's taken away from
    you."
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