http://www.rediff.com/news/2008/feb/19us.htm


India [ Images ] may have taken giant strides in every possible sphere of life 
across the world, but there are things that come as real blot to its global 
image.  
Quoting a US Department of Homeland Security report, mercurynews reports that 
Indians are the fastest-growing group of illegal immigrants in the United 
States. 
The report says there are 2,70,000 unauthorized Indians in the United States - 
a 125 percent jump since 2000, the largest percentage increase of any nation 
with more than 100,000 illegal immigrants in that country.
The report says though the number of Indian immigrants is low when compared to 
people from Mexico, the Indian context is appalling as the illegal immigrants 
mostly consist high-skilled workers. Illegal immigrants from other countries 
are mostly low-skilled workers.
Mercurynews, in its report, also says if the trend continues India will only 
trail only Mexico, El Salvador and Guatemala in illegal immigration. 
The report quoting experts says virtually all immigrants enter the US legally 
and then violate the visa terms, thus becomimg illegal immigrants.
"How do you get in? You come across the border, or you arrive here with a 
visa," Lindsay Lowell, policy director for the Institute for the Study of 
International Migration at Georgetown University told Mercurynews. 
"Indians aren't going to be walking across the border like Mexicans," he said.
Federal officials calculated the number of illegal immigrants by using census 
estimates of the total number of immigrants from individual countries, 
compiling the total number of legal immigrants using federal immigration and 
naturalization records, and then subtracting the number of legal residents from 
the total immigrant population to determine the number of undocumented people, 
the report said. 
Asked by Mercurynews about the number of illegal Indians in Silicon Valley, 
Banjit Singh, an Indian-born taxi driver, said, "Here, there is a little bit. 
But you go to another city or state, like Los Angeles or New York, there are 
many illegal people."
Local immigration lawyers say that particularly among Indians, the ups and 
downs of Silicon Valley's economy since 2001 are one reason why Indians have 
fallen out of legal status. 
"Most are bachelors; the way they get here is they have a job," Gabriel Jack, a 
San Jose immigration lawyer, said of many of his Indian clients. 
"They come here as professionals, most often in the H-1B program, and given the 
fluctuations of Silicon Valley, the business climate, these guys lose their 
jobs. They get laid off or they wager their hands on a start-up coming in," 
Jack said.
"The problem with the H-1B program is, you can't have any significant time 
between jobs" without falling out of legal status. 
Indians made up 44 percent of H-1B applicants in the 2005-06 fiscal year, five 
times the number from second-place China, the report says.
The report says another source is relatives from India who arrive for a visit 
on a tourist visa and never go home. 
"America is a very attractive country; everybody who comes here wants to stay," 
said Shah Peerally, a Silicon Valley immigration lawyer. "I can tell you right 
now, there are nearly 1 billion people in India, of which maybe 800 million 
want to come here." 
The United States deported close to 500 Indians a year in recent years, another 
expert tells Mecurynews. 
"Unless Congress reforms the immigration system we are going to see this 
high-skilled, illegal workforce emerging," said Frank D. Bean, director of the 
Immigration Research Center at the University of California-Irvine.
 

Uttam Kumar Borthakur

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