Cultural Orientation needs to be more extensive

If you have wondered how much orientation to western living refugees receive before leaving camps in Asia or Africa, here is an article from a UN agency about Burmese Karen people preparing for their new lives by receiving instruction in everyday living in America. This article points out that these programs need to be more extensive and in the native language of the refugees.

Feedback on the cultural orientation sessions has generally been positive although one IOM instructor told IRIN: “I feel the programme and training is good but time is a constraint and perhaps it should be longer.”

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Some of the refugees, while appreciating the programme, felt the period for studying English was insufficient and some complained that the DVDs were not in the Karen language.

But, in light of the on-going controversy in Waterbury, CT, I’m thinking those Karen people resettled there may have already learned some western ways and have spoken up.  Go back and read about them here (esp. see Ya Za and his tape recorder) and then you will laugh at this quote.

“We find the Burmese refugees don’t want to make waves … it’s part of their culture to keep their problems within the family,” Salinkowski told IRIN. “So sometimes when a problem arises, they don’t tell the resettlement agencies about it and they go for months without dealing with the problem.”

State Department shuts down Connecticut volag

Update May 10, 2008:  The State Department has yanked their contract, see the latest news here.

We told you a few weeks ago that the International Institute of Connecticut had come under fire from Burmese Karen refugees and their church advocates for not taking care of the refugees they had been contracted to resettle.   Now comes news that the State Department has shut them down, at least for now. 

WATERBURY — The U.S. State Department has temporarily halted the International Institute of Connecticut from processing any more refugees because of failures in the way Burmese refugees were resettled here.

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Admitting the institute was “deficient” in its handling of refugees, the president of the national organization that contracts with the State Department said until the institute changes the way it helps refugees, it will not be allowed to resettle any incoming refugees who are not related to those already here.

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“Mistakes were made and you ended up with some folks that did not get the best the resettlement community has to offer,” said Lavinia Limón, President of the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants, parent organization of the International Institute of Connecticut. “No one person was assigned for families. That’s difficult for people who are so lost like these people… The refugees didn’t really know who was responsible for them.”

It is maddening!  Read the whole article!   We keep hearing this story from all over the country.  We experienced it ourselves when we saw the volag here in Hagerstown, MD place refugees in the worst, most crime-ridden section of the city.  Is it just sheer incompetence, simply a case as Ms. Limon told the reporter, of things falling through the cracks.

The Burmese Karen Christians have lived in camps for years.  I don’t understand how they could possibly be independent and out to work in America within weeks or even months.   They need to learn English, they need to learn our bureaucratic mazes, and for goodness sakes they need to learn the simplest things that we take for granted.  And, I believe, the care and attention they receive from the church members will ultimately help them become a part of our culture.

On the one hand Ms. Limon says volunteers are important and on the other suggests that the refugees are being coddled by the churches.  This last comment from Ms. Limon is especially annoying.

“What I have heard is that the churches have put themselves in the position of advocacy vis-à-vis the refugees. The institute feels these refugees are its responsibility and that they’ve maybe fallen down on the job and having these third parties come in as if they are the guardians of everything that is good and right in the world has engendered some defensiveness.”

Why on earth would someone want to discourage volunteer involvement? We need less refugees and we need better care for the ones we do take, and that care involves helping them become assimilated to America.  Hurrah for the church people of Waterbury!

By the way, Lavinia Limon and the US Committee for Refugees and Immigrants has other problem subcontractors as well.  Check out the International Institute of Erie here.

See our interview with Chris Coen, Friends of Refugees, for more on how refugees have been left in the lurch by government funded volags.

The E-2 Treaty Investor, what’s this all about?

I’m getting off track, this is not about refugees, but as far as I know no one is looking into the other immigration programs that bring numbers of future citizens from perhaps less than desireable places to America.    Always on Watch sent me this link the other day and I wondered if it tied in with what I’ve written about our Hagerstown convenience store food stamp scam and others we have written about here.

I was shocked at the list of countries that can send people to invest in America.  What if they are coming in with a bankroll from say Pakistan and opening up convenience stores and gas stations that accept food stamps? 

Let’s start by reviewing the rules for getting E-2 Treaty Investor status. That status gives nationals of certain countries the right to live in the U.S. while directing and developing a commercial enterprise. E-2 status is also available to essential employees of the investor.

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The investment cannot be passive (for example, bank accounts, undeveloped land). Further, an investment that only supports the investor and his or her family is a problem. The government likes to see at least one employee.

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To qualify for E-2 status, you must be a national of Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Belgium, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Cameroon, Canada, China (Taiwon), Chile, Colombia, Congo, Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic, Egypt, Ethiopia, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Grenada, Honduras, Iran, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Korea, Krygzystan, Liberia, Luxemourg, Macedonia, Mexico, Moldova, the Netherlands, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Panama, Paraguay, the Phillipines, Poland, Romania, Senegal, Singapore, Slovakia, Spain, Sri Lanka, Suriname, Sweden, Switzerland, Thailand, Togo, Tunisia, Turkey or the United Kingdom.

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As for the investor green card program, many people with substantial financial resources find easier ways to get permanent residence. That’s because the program is very restrictive. Still, for those with the money to invest and no other way to get immigrant status, it can be a path to permanent residence.

Just something to think about.

And, since we don’t have much humor at RRW, here is something a friend sent me last night.  It’s one of those things circulating around the internet with no author.  You gotta laugh!

SERIOUS NEWS

Warning From Pakistan This morning, from a cave somewhere in Pakistan, Taliban Minister of Migration, Mohammed Omar, warned the United States and Canada that if military action against Iraq continues, Taliban authorities will cut off America ‘s and Canada ‘s supply of convenience store managers. And, if this action does not yield sufficient results, cab drivers will be next, followed by Dell and Sprint customer service reps. _____It’s getting ugly!

 

Salt Lake City, UT refugee overload?

Here is an article that appeared all over the place in the last couple of days featuring a wonderful woman who is helping refugees in Salt Lake City.   She had a troubled past, addicted to drugs and living on the street, and has now found comfort in helping refugees, mostly Africans, to learn to live in America.  Nice story, but to me the story had more to it.

First, the city is lucky to have Veronica Moses because it sounds like the Resettlement agencies are overloaded and refugees are not getting the support they need.   This is happening everywhere it seems and Moses gets it.

Moses has been sober for five years now, but she spent several years hooked on cocaine and heroin and living with other wayward young people on the streets of Salt Lake City. She stayed in Pioneer Park and seedy motels. She lived for drugs and couldn’t quit. One day, when police pulled her from a trash bin downtown, she finally did.

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“I am looking at this population, and I know what can happen,” Moses says. “If they don’t have mentors, if they aren’t taught how to be independent, if they aren’t loved ….”

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“In five years, we will see the crime population, the drug population, drug selling. It’s all going to rise,” she says.

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A series of events last spring and summer threatened to allow scores of young refugees to fall through the cracks

The “event” involves the sale of an apartment complex where many of the Africans, mostly Somali Bantu, had been placed by the volag resettlement agency.  The Somalis were evicted. The apartment owner becomes the bad guy.

The new owner had increased monthly rents and quit accepting Section 8 housing vouchers, which helped to subsidize rents. In addition, about 40 percent of residents were supported by a federal rental assistance program that ended last summer.

We’ve heard this story before in Shelbyville, TN and Manchester, NH.   The quality of an apartment building declines dramatically when it is largely occupied by refugees who have not been properly instructed in how to assimilate to American culture.  

What I took away from this article in the Deseret Morning News was that refugees are lucky to have Veronica Moses but that there are too many refugees going to Salt Lake City and not enough people to help them assimilate, so there will be more apartment owners unwilling to rent to refugees here and elsewhere.  I blame the volags for this.

Major fire in refugee camp in Nepal, thousands homeless

A fire of unknown origin raced through the closely packed huts of a refugee camp for Bhutanese refugees.   The UN is bringing tents for temporary housing to eastern Nepal.    We’ve written about the tense political situation in these camps—tense because some camp leaders do not want these ethnic Nepali refugees, who have been booted from Bhutan, scattered to the four winds.   By scattering the people around the world the political pressure is thus removed from Bhutan to repatriate this ethnic group. 

Sounds like Bhutan is attempting to keep Bhutan for the Bhutanese, just as Pat Buchanan pointed out the other day in his article entitled “The return of ethnic Nationalism.”

One hundred thousand are in the pipeline to be resettled in the West or to Australia.   The US has promised to take 60,000 over the next few years.

Around 107,000 refugees of ethnic Nepalese origin from Bhutan have been living in UN-run camps in Nepal since the early 1990s when Bhutan’s government launched cultural reforms encouraging the use of the local language and dress.

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Between 1991 and 1993 tens of thousands of Bhutanese crossed a narrow strip of India’s West Bengal state, and have been living ever since in temporary camps close to Nepal’s border with India.

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The United Nations International Office of Migration has started the process of resettling tens of thousands of the refugees, with the United States offering to take 60,000 people.

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Around 23,000 people have registered for resettlement, but tensions have risen in the seven UN-run camps because some want to be allowed to return to the Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan, where many still have land and businesses.

I’m guessing the resettlement will be stepped up as a result of the fire.   Read the rest of the story here.