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Las Vegas: Editorial: Don't break family apart

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  • Las Vegas: Editorial: Don't break family apart

    LasVegas Sun, NV
    Jan 26 2005



    Editorial: Don't break family apart
    LAS VEGAS SUN

    Two Las Vegas girls, whose only crime was to have been brought to the
    United States by their father when they were 4 and 3, are being
    detained in a federal holding cell in Los Angeles, awaiting
    deportation. They've been there 11 days now. It's up to a federal
    magistrate to decide whether they should be separated from their
    family, including three other sisters, or be sent to Armenia. That is
    their country of birth, but, to them, it's an alien land where they
    have no friends or family, no language skills, no means of supporting
    themselves.

    Only some desperate calls by their family's attorney on Jan. 17
    prevented them from being forcibly boarded onto a plane. On Jan. 18
    they received a reprieve when the one flight to Moscow was full. On
    Jan. 19, just three hours before their scheduled flight, their lawyer
    was successful in appealing to a federal magistrate, who granted the
    girls a stay while he reviewed the facts of the case.

    The girls are Emma Sarkisian, 18, who graduated last June from Palo
    Verde High School, and her sister, Mariam, 17, a student at Palo
    Verde. Their parents, Rouben and Anoush Sarkisian, brought them to
    the U.S. in 1991. The couple had three more daughters, who, having
    been born here, are legal citizens. The marriage broke up and Rouben
    married a U.S. citizen, automatically making him a U.S. "resident"
    under immigration law. That marriage also broke up and the residency
    status of the two girls remained in limbo until last July. That month
    Rouben took the girls to immigration officials, hoping to confirm
    their status as residents. Instead, officials determined they weren't
    legal citizens and ordered the girls to check in with them once a
    month. They also began negotiating with Armenia to receive them.

    As Armenia was a republic of the Soviet Union at the time of the
    girls' birth, officials of the now-independent republic at first
    disclaimed any responsibility for them. But on Jan. 14, during their
    monthly visit to the immigration office, the girls were told that
    Armenia had decided to accept them and they were whisked away to the
    cell in Los Angeles.

    In our view, the girls should be immediately released from custody
    and returned to their family while awaiting the magistrate's
    decision. We also believe it would be a miscarriage of justice for
    the girls to be deported. This is the only country they've ever
    known. Their father erred in not applying for their residency years
    ago. But by any humanitarian standard, that is no reason for the
    girls to be traumatized by tearing them away from their family, their
    friends and the lives they've been living here.
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