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Denver: Family buys time i n asylum attempt

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  • Denver: Family buys time i n asylum attempt

    Grand Junction Sentinel, CO
    Nov 13 2004

    Family buys time i n asylum attempt
    By GARY HARMON
    The Daily Sentinel


    Four members of an Armenian family hoping to avoid deportation have
    filed for visas as victims of trafficking, a move that forestalled
    any immediate action to return them to their native country.

    The four, however, remain in custody in a federal holding center in
    Aurora, said a spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Homeland
    Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement bureau.

    The four members of the Sargsyan family -- Hayk, a senior at Ridgway
    High School; his brother, Gevork, a chemical-engineering student at
    the University of Colorado; their sister Meri; and father, Ruben --
    were taken into custody last week after an immigration hearing in
    Denver.

    The eldest sister of the family, Nvart Indinyan, said she feared that
    her brothers were due to be deported immediately because their
    photographs had been taken while they have been in custody.

    The applications for so-called "T visas" freezes the process until a
    decision is made, said Virginia Kice, spokeswoman for Immigration and
    Customs Enforcement.

    Decisions on T visas are made out of the agency's Vermont service
    center, said Sharon Rummery of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
    Services, another Homeland Security agency, and there is no deadline
    for them to act.

    T visas were established in 2000 for victims of human trafficking;
    they allow victims to remain in the United States if they are deemed
    to be in danger of extreme hardship or severe harm if they're
    returned to their home countries.

    They also are expected to cooperate with investigations into the
    trafficking that resulted in their arrival in the United States.

    Victims of human trafficking may apply for permanent residency after
    three years.

    Indinyan said she feared her family would be harmed in Armenia by
    people there who were defrauded by her ex-husband.

    Other avenues for the Sargsyan family have been exhausted, Kice said.

    They arrived in the United States on student visas and no longer have
    the right to remain in the country, she said.

    Taking the family members into custody was necessary, she said. There
    are 350,000 to 400,000 people in the country who simply ignored their
    final-removal orders, Kice said.

    "It's a serious problem," she said.

    The Sargsyan family's popularity in Ouray County is admirable, but
    not a factor in whether they should be allowed to remain, Kice said.

    "This is not a popularity contest," she said. "No one is above the
    law. Everyone wants to see the law enforced, except when it comes to
    someone they know."

    Other Armenians have waited a long time to get to the United States
    by legal means, Kice said, and those cases also should be remembered,
    she said.

    Ridgway High School students planned to demonstrate today in Denver
    in support of the their classmate and his family.
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