VOA标准英语2012--Syrians in US May Get Extended Stays
时间:2012-03-21 07:39:15
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Syrians in US May Get Extended Stays
Syrian-Americans rallied again in Washington, last week, against the government of President Bashar al-Assad.
Many of them are worried their relatives and loved ones who have been in the United States on temporary visas will have to go back to Syria once their visas run out.
Among those at risk: Nassib Nwelati, a Syrian student here on a scholarship to study business.
“Many Syrians I know are scared to go back. They don’t know what to do. They have been so worried because not only you need to worry about what’s going on in Syria and watch the news and cry for these people. But also you need to worry about your status because the time is ticking, the clock is ticking,” Nwelati said.
Now help may be on the way. Voice of America has learned the Obama Administration is about to recommend what is called a “Temporary Protection Status” for Syrian nationals currently in the U.S.
If approved, the move would allow Syrian nationals already in the United States - on tourist, business, student and other such visas - to remain in the country, until the situation in Syria
stabilizes1 and becomes safer for the nationals to go home.
Earlier this month, six Democratic senators sent a letter to President Obama calling on him to quickly designate Syrian nationals for the temporary protection status.
They say forcing Syrians to return to their country in the midst of
ongoing2 violence would undermine U.S. leadership and is inconsistent with what they say is America’s traditional role as a safe
haven3 for those fleeing
repression4.
Attorney Abed Ayoub is with the largest Arab-American civil rights organization in the U.S. He helped lead a
coalition5 of groups to petition the Department of Homeland Security in January for the temporary protection status.
“The
humanitarian6 situation on the ground in Syria is
dire7. And forcing anybody to return is inhumane. We can’t put these individual’s lives in
jeopardy8 . If the U.S. State Department feels the embassy over there is not safe enough for their employees then, for sure, the country’s not safe enough for its nationals to return,” he said.
Data from the Department of Homeland Security’s immigration registry says there are about 3,000 Syrian nationals who would be
eligible9, although Arab-American
activists10 say that number is much higher.
But for visiting Syrians like Nassib, the protection status may
literally11 mean the difference between life and death.
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