Illegal immigration to US

I wonder why so many Indians are fleeing their paradise?

Illegal Immigration Pipeline From South Asia to US Passes through Guatemala
By Julie López
Published May 17, 2011
| Fox News Latino

The shocking discovery Tuesday of 513 migrants --many of them from India and other Asian countries – in two trucks in Chiapas, Mexico headed for the U.S. border, lays bare the growing importance of an illegal pipeline that funnels people from South Asia to the United States. Fox News Latino takes an exclusive look at this illegal immigration traffic.

Guatemala City --The house was in a residential section of Guatemala City, just an ordinary structure that blended into the landscape.

But what Guatemalan immigration authorities found inside in February was anything but ordinary: 27 males, including two minors, who had not eaten or bathed for days.

Even more intriguing, they were from India – nearly 10,000 miles, or a 17-hour plane ride, away.
These immigrants, who carried passports and return plane tickets, were among the 1,688 Indians who entered the country through Guatemalan immigration checkpoints at the airport or by land between January and April.

The Garbage Hotel --built out of twelve tons of trash collected from European beaches-- opened in Madrid, Spain. The hotel is part of a campaign to draw attention to taking care of the world’s beaches.

But most of them, like the immigrants found in the Guatemala City house, evidently had no intention of going back to India.

During that period, only 436, or 25 percent, left by the same means.

Increasingly, Indians seem to be using Guatemala – which doesn’t require a visa for Indian nationals – as a bridge to begin an illegal journey through Mexico, where a visa is required, to their final destination in the United States, said Enrique Degenhart, who took office in early 2010 as Guatemala’s director of immigration services.

“An abrupt increase in the number of Indian citizens entering Guatemala led us to ponder whether they were using this country as a bridge,” Degenhart said. “After exchanging information with Mexico, we realized that a high percentage [of Indians] entered Guatemala due to the visa status modification and crossed the border illegally onto Mexico.”

New Visa Rules Lead to Rise in Indian Migration

Indians have been allowed to enter Guatemala without a visa since 2009, after diplomatic and commercial relations were established with India, and in response to India’s offer of a $10 million credit line and other assistance, according to the Indian embassy.

The changes precipitated a clear uptick in Indian travel to Guatemala.

While only 304 Indians entered the country legally in 2008, the number tripled the following year, and continued to increase.

Degenhart says he was alarmed when he realized how many Indians entered the country legally in 2010, a total of 4,966, while only 1,058 exited the country legally – that was only 21 per cent of those who entered.

These numbers turn Guatemala into a giant waiting room, a geographical prelude, for the bottle neck that Mexico has become for Indians and other undocumented immigrants heading to the United States.

The impact of the easier access to Guatemala for people from India grew crystal clear a little over a year ago, when U.S. border authorities identified an influx of Indian citizens crossing over illegally.

Indians Are “Most Significant” Human Smuggling Trend

U.S. immigration officials say that after Latin Americans, people from India are the largest group of migrants caught crossing the Southwest border.

Indeed, while people from India account for one of the largest groups of legal immigrants in the United States – foreign-born Indians, many of whom come to the United States on employment-based visas, numbered 1.5 million in 2006, according to the U.S. Census – they also accounted for 2.3 percent of all U.S. undocumented immigrants.

A 2008 Migration Policy Institute report said: “The number of unauthorized immigrants from India grew faster than the number of any other immigrant group between 2000 and 2006.”
Kumar Kibble, the deputy director for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, was quoted in the Los Angeles Times as saying that Indian migration is the “most significant” human smuggling trend being tracked by U.S. authorities.

“For the most part it’s the jobs,” said a senior U.S. law enforcement official, with direct knowledge about human smuggling on the Southwest border, about what draws the migrants. “The economic opportunities, they come for a better life.”

“The Indian nationals will pay from $35,000 to $75,000 to get to the United States,” said the official, who spoke on the condition that he not be identified.

In 2009, the U.S. Border Patrol arrested 99 India nationals along the Southwest border.
In early 2010, at least 1,600 Indians were caught in Texas alone. An undetermined number made it across the border undetected among immigrants from other nationalities, particularly Central American, who aren’t required visas to enter Guatemala either.

In 2011, the number of Indians entering Guatemala legally continues to grow. By April, the monthly average of Indians entering had grown by 10.

A Man Carried 50 Indian Passports
Last March, a man was arrested in Guatemala’s international airport, en route to Ecuador, with 50 passports from India while trying to leave the country with a fake passport.

In November 2010, an Indian citizen, Adil Vali Mohammed, was arrested after leaving Guatemala and arriving at the New Delhi airport carrying 31 Indian passports. Degenhart suspects that these documents were being used by Indians to enter Guatemala and then were sent back to India to be used by another group traveling to Guatemala.

Police authorities in New Delhi said that Mohammed’s arrest led to the discovery of a human trafficking network that transports Indians to the United States through Mexico or Canada, after they arrive in Guatemala, according to Indian press reports.

“If a country has less visa requirements, or corrupt officials, or there’s a country where they have better contacts, that the country [traffickers] will travel through to get to the United States,” said the U.S. senior law enforcement official. “The trafficking networks are fluid, they’ll go to where the opportunity is.”

In 2010, at least 200 Indians were denied entry to Guatemala, mostly because they carried invalid travel or identification documents, according to immigration authorities, who are also investigating whether immigration officials are involved in the trafficking network.

Central American immigrants, too, have begun to notice Indians in their travels.

“[Last February], I saw three Indians while travelling through Oaxaca on board a small train,” said Jonathan, a Honduran migrant passing through Guatemala. “There were about one hundred of us in there; most were from Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua.”

Guatemala’s Borders Are Vulnerable
Visa requirements do not stop the flow of undocumented immigrants from other continents. The main reason: It’s relatively easy to enter Guatemala, even illegally.

Some fly directly to Guatemala if they are not required a visa to enter; others get in without valid identification or travel documents due to the country’s weak border protection.

Degenhart said that Indians had been using the Caribbean to reach Mexico, but when visa policies were strengthened in the Caribbean, traffickers switched their routes to Guatemala in 2010 due to the visa exemption.

Before February’s case, no large groups of Indians had been caught since the late 1990s.
Guatemala has visa requirement exemptions for 84 countries. Among them are Taiwan, Madagascar, Malaysia and Russia, but no citizens from these countries have been spotted trying to cross over to Mexico.

The trafficker responsible for locking up the 27 Indian immigrants remains unidentified.
“Not a Single Coyote Has Been Convicted”

Mauro Guzmán, president of the Migrants Commission in the Guatemalan Congress, said that “not a single coyote [trafficker] has been convicted in Guatemala, which is the reason why they operate with such impunity.”

Guzmán attributed the lack of convictions partly to corruption, and to the fact that most immigrants shy away from accusing the traffickers to avoid delaying their journey to the United States or their return to their home country, or because they fear reprisals from the traffickers.
“Some of them know where the immigrants [and their families] live,” the congressman said.
Also, some undocumented immigrants, or even the documented ones, opt to avoid legal procedures that could keep them from continuing their path to the United States because they have already paid a high sum of money for the journey, or they owe at least half of it.
Degenhart says that the Public Ministry, not immigration authorities, investigates these cases.
Immigration only administers the official immigration checkpoints, to ensure that travelers allowed into the country have the proper documentation.

Guzmán warns that trafficking immigrants is not directly addressed by Guatemalan law, that there are no police, prosecutors and judges specialized in immigration issues, a situation he hopes a new law initiative could change if approved in 2011 – an unlikely scenario considering this is an election year.

In the meantime, after the November arrest in the New Delhi airport, Indian police has identified the kingpin of at least one trafficking network as “Ronnie,” an India native who waits for the Indian immigrants in Guatemala and puts them up at safe houses. Yet, Guatemalan police has been unable to locate him.

Immigration Control At Airports Is in Hands of Airlines
Six years ago, the immigration controls linked to air travel were placed in the hands of the airlines. But this year, at Degenhart’s request, immigration will reinstall a check point for passengers leaving the country, and stricter controls will also be placed at land borders with El Salvador and Honduras.

“The flow [of undocumented immigrants] has decreased considerably because we have strengthened several checkpoints,” Degenhart explained, although he acknowledges that the blind spots used by most undocumented immigrants remain unguarded. “Our northern and southern borders are so vast, and our army is so limited in number of troops, that it’s easy to traffic people through the same blind spots used to traffic drugs and weapons.”

Guatemala lacks an equivalent of the U.S. Border Patrol, and the army numbers only 17,100 soldiers – or one for every 818 inhabitants – although President Alvaro Colom wants to increase them to 21,100 if the budget allows. The only means of increasing security is passing a tax reform that opposition parties in the Congress also see as a political liability given the present electoral year.

Degenhart has asked the Ministry of Foreign Relations to change the entry requirements for Indians, obliging them to have a stamped visa on their passport before arriving in Guatemala.
Whether his policies to beef up security in immigration check points at airports, and borders with El Salvador and Honduras, will last into the new administration taking office in 2012 remains to be seen.
In the meantime, undocumented immigrants – including Indians, once their visa exemption is removed – have very few choices for accessing Mexico and the United States other than to travel through Guatemala.
After finding the 27 Indian immigrants in February, Degenhart is convinced that there are mafias dedicated to trafficking them through Guatemala.

“Mexico detains and takes them to a shelter,” he said, “but they become a problem because they don’t carry travel and identification documents, so Mexican authorities don’t know if the immigrants are from India, Pakistan or any other country.”

Then, it can be unclear to where they should be deported, despite the fact that Mexico, for instance, lays the groundwork for their expulsion.

In 2010, for example, some 350 Indians were held at Mexican immigration shelters for deportation.

“We expect that the reinstatement of visa requirements for them [in Central America] is treated as an urgent matter, so they cannot longer use Guatemala as a bridge,” Degenhart said.
Julie López is a freelance writer based in Guatemala.

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Re: Illegal immigration to US

Poverty is a huge problem in India where 100s of millions of people live under the poverty line. So can you blame them if they want to search for a better future?

I think the solution of this problem is the just distribution of money. If few hundred ultra rich people of India will share it with their poor, there might be change. Or else the GDP can continue growing and ending up in the pockets of few hundred ultra rich.

Re: Illegal immigration to US

yes, it is poverty ofcourse.

But some non-poor people also want to migrate to the US because living conditions are much better there and $1 = Rs.45!

@achterbahn - you know there is never going to be equal distribution of wealth! some people are going to build microsoft, some are going to work for microsoft and some are going to cleaning the mansions & houses where the first two live!

Re: Illegal immigration to US

I actually feel for these poor people who migrate to other countries as refugees. Some of them probably wouldn't have eaten for days. May Allah help them in their struggle to make their end meet.

Re: Illegal immigration to US

Well I think its a right of every one to look for better opportunities but I have seen some very troubling examples of Indians (especially North Indians) who want to leave India at all costs, people carry out fake paper marriages and bring their so called wives to western countries. These girls have to work and feed, and pay for the fees of their husbands. In most cases they are not even living together, and I have seen those girls sleeping with different people and asking them for money to pay off their hubbies otherwise he would have their visa revoked and sent back to India. At least ethics should not be affected by people in pursuance of their goals.

Re: Illegal immigration to US

No offense to North Indians but this thing is serious which needs to be addressed by Indian government and society,

Re: Illegal immigration to US

^^ I hear what you say. It doesn't fit with the "super power" mantra that we hear from Indians day and night.

So yeah, they should really concentrate on this mess first, before they could even dream of being a super power.

Re: Illegal immigration to US

dude this may be true for pakistan but please dont extend it to india.
Thank you very much but keep your hate and frustration to yourself.

i hope you dont live in canada.

Re: Illegal immigration to US

lol what i stated is from my experience, nothing wrong in that! Indians doing anything to get out of their country.

Re: Illegal immigration to US

Mate I dont have any problem if the Indians are ok with this, but personally i feel sorry for the girls being affected by this scam.

http://www.canadaupdates.com/content/fake-marriage-adverts-caused-increase-visa-applications

Fake marriage adverts caused increase in visa applications
by Harleen Kaur - February 3, 2010
United Kingdom, February 3: According to immigration officials and experts in the United Kingdom, the reason behind sudden increase in UK visa application numbers from India has been due to increased advertisements for fake paper marriages.

This has been reported by a renowned news publication, The Daily Telegraph. It stated that several fraudulent immigration agents in Indian were using the new points based system (PBS) introduced by the UK for immigrating to the country. Hence, they were alluring a majority of unqualified applicants and also helping them in arranging fake paper marriages (court marriages) so as to enable them get Tier 4 Student visa for the UK.

So, the spouses of such applicants enter Britain through sham marriages and get employed there. That is not all. They even explore various options to extend their UK visas so as to stay there permanently.

**There has been a tremendous increase in the number of matrimonial adverts involving fake marriages which required Indian alliances for foreign settled boys. And these adverts were found in a number of famous daily publications of Punjab in India. **

It was revealed by the immigration agents that those having UK student visas were being targeted by several families in India so as to marry their sons or daughters by arranging a paper marriage. They did not hesitate to pay a hefty sum of up to £10,000. The primary motive of all such marriages is to gain entry into the UK, reported the Daily Telegraph.

However, increased fake marriages are not the only reason for a noteworthy rise in UK student visas from India. Another reason is that the Australian visas have lost any charm for the Indian students in the wake of unabated attacks on the Indians since the last year. Moreover, there have been some amendments in the norms for applicants seeking Australian student visa resulting in decline in the applications for Australian visa.

The UK Border Agency has already issued suspension orders for nearly 60 education providers in the UK after their role in the student visa scam.

Severe Action Aganist Fraud Marriages (Paper Marriages / Marriages of Convenience)
A meeting against paper marriages / Fraud Marriages / marriages of convenience is being held in Vancouver. Minister Kenney said in the meeting that he want to hear people’s views and experiences linked to marriages of convenience and their opinions and ideas on how best to address them. He believes that management can sometimes obtain the best ideas from the grass-roots.

To balance the town hall meetings, Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) newly launched online consultations on marriage fraud. The nationwide online survey is obtainable on CIC’s website at cic.sondages-surveys.ca/s/marriage-fraud/langen and is open in anticipation of November 3 for public input.

Minister Kenney raised immigration fraud issues during his current visit to China, India and the Philippines, the top three sources of immigrants to Canada. There, he talked about opportunities for teamwork in combating immigration fraud, including the use of marriages of convenience or paper marriages to dodge Canada’s immigration laws. Canada is besides working closely with India to put a stop to the operations of fraudsters in the Punjab region.

Information composed through the meetings and online consultations will assist inform future actions taken by the Government of Canada to concentrate on marriage fraud.

Re: Illegal immigration to US

Leave it to pakistanis to interpret any news related to india according to their linking to hide their own frustration.

again thanks but no thanks for your concern. please take care of your own canadian visa process.

Re: Illegal immigration to US

That goes for you indians too dude. Ab mirchain kyun lag rahi hain?

Re: Illegal immigration to US

^^ Aise hi. galat bayani pe lag jati hai. Is report pe kis ko problem hai, problem tou bhai ke opinion pe hai.

Re: Illegal immigration to US

dear god... now whats the need to bring india - paki into this. ( i cant believe i am saying this ) lol usually I'm the first one to start screaming about the pakis, not on this forum though... FB and anywhere else... hell yea !!!

But this is just a random news. A fact. Accept it. Although Ali Sayed your title does sound a tad bit insulting.... like u're looking to instigate Indians on this forum ??? Need more people to read your post ????

Besides India is not Indian's paradise. It is Amreeka !!!!

Look India's always going to have more problems/more corruptions / more poor people/ more filth/ more scum/ more anything and everything coz dude we are like one billion people. And counting !!!!

Pak and India can't be compared.

Re: Illegal immigration to US

Ali-Syed - you better be lying through your teeth to just insult India, for your own sake.

If you are not lying, look at what you have admitted to about yourself. I will explain.

You have seen girls sleeping with diff people and asking fo money? Seriously? What kind of business are you in that lets you see such things?

And since you are in that business, what you say has no credibility anyway.

Re: Illegal immigration to US

Lol even if it is true there would one or two idiots every where how can u compare it to entire population(75 petcent of population is from north india ).most of the population in us is from south india tech guys, elite north indians are settled into all major cities in india, they are into business unlike southie

Re: Illegal immigration to US

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/43784029/ns/business-stocks_and_economy/

More illegal immigrants from India crossing border

By CHRISTOPHER SHERMAN, WILL WEISSERT

updated 7/17/2011 10:23:18 AM ET

LOS FRESNOS, Texas — Police wearing berets and bulletproof vests broke down the door of a Guatemala City apartment in February hunting for illegal drugs. Instead, they found a different kind of illicit shipment: 27 immigrants from India packed into two locked rooms.

Re: Illegal immigration to US

While going through immigration reports of some countries I found out that Indians and Chinese were the ones who immigrated in largest numbers. Poverty and overpopulation is common in both these countries so it may be a reason.

It seems the general population in these countries feels left out from the economic boom and is desperate to leave to improve their living conditions.