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Green Card 'Joy': Number Of U.S. Diversity Visa Applicants In Armeni

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  • Green Card 'Joy': Number Of U.S. Diversity Visa Applicants In Armeni

    GREEN CARD 'JOY': NUMBER OF U.S. DIVERSITY VISA APPLICANTS IN ARMENIA REVEALS A SORRY TREND
    By Siranuysh Gevorgyan

    ArmeniaNow
    Society | 03.10.12 | 15:15

    An annual presentation of U.S. Diversity Visa facts and figures this
    week revealed that nearly 100,000 citizens of Armenian had applied
    for the lottery that grants the winners the right to immigrate to
    the United States.

    Nearly one in 100 (or 998 Armenians) got to be the randomly selected
    winners of what are better known as Green Cards, U.S. Consul in
    Armenia George Lynn announced on Tuesday.

    In 2011, 25,000 and 53,000 people applied for Green Card lottery
    accordingly from neighboring Azerbaijan and Georgia that have
    populations of some 9 million and 4.5 million, respectively, (as
    compared to Armenia's 3 million or so).

    According to the U.S. embassy in Yerevan, most Armenians obtain their
    immigrant visas to the U.S through the Diversity Visa Program or via
    family ties. The number of applicants from Armenia in 2011 grew by
    about 6,000 over the previous year.

    Arman Sahakyan, a 24-year-old citizen of Armenia with a degree in law,
    is one the lucky winners of the U.S. government lottery. Now he has
    to pass an interview at a local consular section. Sahakyan says if he
    passes the final stage he will be very happy to leave for the United
    States in 2013.

    "I am sure as a young man I will have better opportunities in America,"
    Sahakyan tells ArmeniaNow.

    Armenian sociologists and ethnographers do not share Sahakyan's joy.

    They think that 100,000 is a "dreadful" number of applicants for
    a foreign country's visa for a tiny country like Armenia that has
    a population of less than 3 million. A recent Gullup study showed
    that about 39 percent of Armenians wished to leave Armenia. The 2010
    survey conducted by the leading international pollster revealed that
    Armenia had the highest percent of citizens willing to emigrate among
    10 post-Soviet countries.

    Ethnographer Hranush Kharatyan says she is "horrified" by the number
    of Green Card applicants.

    "According to the United Nations data, Armenia is an aging country,
    so the demographic structure is already changed. The number of elderly
    people in Armenia, which is more than 400,000, is disproportionate to
    the population of other age groups. If we add to this also the fact
    that besides elderly people we also have a large number of people
    requiring social care, which is conditioned by the large number of
    people who became disabled in the 1988 earthquake, had stress-caused
    diseases, the number of refugees and needy people, then we can say
    that not only the demographic structure, but also the social structure
    of Armenia are endangered," says Kharatyan.

    At the same time the specialist believes that the potential number
    of U.S. Green Card seekers may be much higher, simply not all have
    access to technologies or knowledge to apply through what has become
    an online-only process.

    She also points out that a lot of people in Armenia get their visas
    via family relationships or get working visas, plus there is a state
    immigration program to Russia and there are thousands of people who
    leave Armenia without any visa or immigration programs to countries
    with which Armenia has visa-free regimes.

    Outward migration has been a major problem in Armenia ever since the
    country gained independence in 1991. The dwindling of the population
    appeared to slow down in the past decade, only to pick up pace again
    in recent years.

    The negative balance of those arriving in and departing from Armenia
    in the first six months of this year was reported at more than 83,000.

    While migration authorities say the number will shrink significantly by
    the end of the year conditioned by the return of some seasonal workers,
    they still have to acknowledge that Armenia will probably have in the
    tens of thousands fewer permanent residents by next January than it
    had a year before.

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