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ICE Deports High School Valedictorian

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  • ICE Deports High School Valedictorian

    ICE DEPORTS HIGH SCHOOL VALEDICTORIAN
    By Corinne Ramey

    AlterNet
    http://www.alternet.org/immigratio n/87462/
    June 9 2008
    CA

    ICE proves its efficiency at wasting U.S. tax dollars.

    I've written about U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
    officials' schoolyard antics before, but the recent news that ICE
    is planning to deport a California high school valedictorian just
    affirms my view that these immigration authorities need to get out
    of the schools. From the San Francisco Chronicle:

    The valedictorian at Fresno's Bullard High School won't be attending
    college in the United States this fall because he's scheduled to
    be deported.

    Seventeen-year-old Arthur Mkoyan's 4.0 grade-point average qualified
    him to enter one of the state's top universities. But he and his mother
    have been ordered back to Armenia after their last appeal for asylum
    failed. The family fled from what used to be part of the Soviet Union
    and has been seeking asylum since 1992.

    But, rest assured, ICE shows its nice side once in a while (and if it's
    not clear, I'm being sarcastic here). As a sort of consolation prize,
    ICE decided to let Arthur stick around for graduation. According to
    the article, "A spokeswoman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement
    says they were given an extension until June 20 so Mkoyan could attend
    his graduation ceremony."

    This past October, the Senate tried to help out students like Arthur,
    but to no avail. Legislation called the Development, Relief, and
    Education for Alien Minors Act -- better know as the DREAM Act -- was
    introduced in the Senate, but failed a procedural vote. The legislation
    would have allowed Arthur and approximately 65,000 other undocumented
    students a path to citizenship and the opportunity for a college
    education. But unfortunately for Arthur, the legislation failed.

    Arthur's story and that of the DREAM Act are just two examples of what
    amounts to an utterly inconsistent immigration policy. Whether ICE
    wants to admit it or not, undocumented immigrants are here to stay,
    and an enforcement-only policy that consists of random deportations
    just isn't going to cut it. According to a recently-released report
    by the Public Policy Institute of California, Immigrant Pathways to
    Legal Permanent Residence: Now and Under a Merit-Based System, more
    than half of the immigrants in California who have legal permanent
    resident status were at some point undocumented. This number is
    42% for the U.S. as a whole. These immigrants -- both documented
    and undocumented -- are a vital part of the nation's economy and
    the fabric of our nation. Deporting smart students like Arthur --
    especially considering that such a huge percentage of immigrants
    eventually receive legal status -- is not only bad for the immigrant
    community, but for the nation as a whole.

    For a slightly happier immigration story, check out this video of
    DMI scholar and Mexican immigrant Samantha Contreras. Samantha was
    undocumented when she graduated from high school, and soon realized
    the hardships associated with being undocumented.. "I learned the
    reality of my immigration status," she said. "I couldn't work,
    I couldn't go to college, I couldn't drive, I couldn't even get a
    Blockbuster membership card." Unlike Arthur's story, Samantha's has
    a happy ending -- an immigrant rights group helped her to enroll in
    college, and now she strives for a career in public policy.
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