May 22, 2013

New U.S. immigration program can help farmworkers

566f8fcc410dbd9e47b7a523b1e9a7f7 New U.S. immigration program can help farmworkers

TULARE, California (AP) — Much of the attention on a new U.S. immigration program that started Wednesday has focused on the hundreds of thousands of students who are in the country illegally and now have the chance at and deferred deportation. But just as many young workers, especially farmworkers, could benefit as well.

“The about the young people who are eligible is that they’re college students and academic superstars that speak English perfectly. And that is, of course, not true for all of them,” said Ed Kissam, a labor policy researcher.

One may be 23-year-old Martin, who was smuggled through a U.S. border checkpoint from Mexico in a car at age 13. He had hoped for an education and career, but he started working full time after school after an accident incapacitated his father. In a California animal laboratory, he cleaned and fed dozens of cows.

Martin was surprised to learn that he may be eligible for the new federal program aimed at young . like him say a work permit and the benefits that come with it could open doors previously closed, leading to better paying jobs, improved and benefits and a path to higher education.

“This would change my ,” Martin said. “I came to this country with the goal of studying and getting ahead. But you really can’t do it without a work permit, a and a drivers’ license.”

The program does not grant or a path to citizenship.

More than half of the 1 million young illegal immigrants eligible for the program are in the labor force, mostly working in low-wage industries, an analysis by the Migration Policy Institute shows.

To be eligible, immigrants must prove they arrived in the United States before they turned 16, were younger than 31 as of June 15, have been living in the country at , are in school or graduated and have not been convicted of certain crimes. The program is also open to individuals who haven’t graduated high school, as long as they enroll in an adult education program, vocational training or even English language instruction.

Despite the possibilities, workers and advocates say farmworkers and others who are out of school could face significant hurdles when applying: a lack of information about the program, limited English skills, little access to legal advice and limited access to adult school to fulfill the program’s education requirement.

Two-thirds of farmworkers are foreign-born Mexicans, the majority without legal status, and many are young. More than half are under the age of 31, according to the National Agricultural Workers Survey. Data from the survey shows that at least 54,000 farmworkers could qualify for the program.

Jaime Hernandez, 23, who picks strawberries in California for $8 per hour, found out about the program from a friend and is hoping to apply.

Hernandez, who crossed the Arizona desert with his parents at age 11, dropped out of high school to work in the fields and help his family. If he is granted a work permit, he plans to get a better-paying job and go back to school to become a lawyer or a radio engineer.

“I’m afraid, I don’t have the money to pay for a lawyer, and I don’t know if I am guaranteed acceptance or if I will be rejected,” Hernandez said. “But still, it’s worth it … I’m not giving up.”

For eligible workers who have never filled out an application and speak little English, applying is intimidating, said UFW Foundation’s Richard Gorman. “Our hope is that once they have papers, once you take away the fear of deportation, that will encourage workers to stand up for themselves and for others in their own workplaces, to form a union or complain to their boss when there is a problem.”

Some farmers are worried the program could cut into their workforce. One group of growers, the Nisei Farmers League, is discouraging farmworkers from applying, worried workers or their families could be deported once their addresses are given to the federal government.

Another worry: Because the application for work authorization asks for all previously used Social Security identification numbers, the information could lead the government to track down agricultural employers who hired the illegal workers and subject them to audits or sanctions, said the league’s president, Manuel Cunha.

“There is no safe haven at the end of the day,” Cunha said.

Federal immigration officials have said they won’t use information from the applications for immigration enforcement against workers. Officials declined to comment on whether information provided by applicants would be used to prosecute or audit employers.

Bin Laden wives and children deported to Saudi Arabia

2e78e83528e1c8b8244c903122c36772 Bin Laden wives and children deported to Saudi Arabia

( News / ) — The three widows and children of Osama Bin Laden have been deported to from the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, officials say.

It follows a year in since the death of the al-.

The three widows, who are believed to have 11 children, left the house in a amid to board a special flight to the Gulf kingdom.

Bin Laden was killed by US special forces a year ago in the north-west Pakistani city of Abbottabad.

used sheets to obscure the view as Bin Laden’s wives and children got on board a at their Islamabad residence.

Bin Ladens ‘on the run’

Bin Laden compound

0a77beee634d8303486fcd99629ca075 Bin Laden wives and children deported to Saudi Arabia

Abbottabad house for Bin Ladens built in 2005
Family reportedly on the run in various Pakistani cities for years beforehand
Bin Laden fathered four children in this period, his youngest wife says
Abbottabad mansion was known locally as “Waziristan Haveli” or “mansion”
He lived on the top floor and was never seen by locals

Plans of Bin Laden’s house
How the Bin Ladens lived

They were detained immediately after the pre- in which he was killed on 2 May 2011.

His wives and two eldest children were eventually charged with staying in Pakistan illegally, and last week completed a 45-day term of at the villa.

The widows were held at the house in the capital which was designated as a “sub-jail”, and all the rest of their children stayed with them.

They were also sentenced to deportation.

The Ministry of the Interior, which was responsible for the family, issued a statement saying it had “passed orders for the deportation of 14 members of OBL family in pursuance of the Court orders”.

“The family was kept safe and sound in a guest house… They have been deported to the country of their choice, Saudi Arabia, today,” it added.

Secrets untold

The two oldest wives are Saudi Arabian, but the youngest – Amal Abdulfattah – is Yemeni and it is believed she will travel on to that country.

It is from leaks of her interrogations with Pakistani intelligence agencies that the most insight into Bin Laden’s time in Pakistan has been gained, says the BBC’s Aleem Maqbool in Islamabad.

The al-Qaeda leader moved from place to place for up to 10 years before finally being killed in the garrison town of Abbottabad.

But many more secrets will go untold with the Bin Laden family, our correspondent says.

On one hand, the Pakistani authorities will be glad to close another chapter of what was an extremely embarrassing episode – on the other, they may be worried about what could be revealed by the family now about life on the run with the world’s most wanted man.

Mladic shuns ‘monstrous’ charges

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( Blog/ ) - Ex- head Ratko Mladic has made his at The Hague , saying he will not enter a plea to the “monstrous” and “obnoxious” charges.

He is charged with atrocities during the 1992-95 Bosnian war, including the massacre of nearly 8,000 and boys in Srebrenica in 1995.

Gen Mladic, who said he was “gravely ill”, told the court he had been “defending my people and my country”.

He was arrested last week in Serbia.

The tribunal indictment charges him with genocide, persecution, extermination, murder, deportation, inhumane acts, terror, deportation and hostage-taking.

Prosecutors say this was his part in a plot to achieve the “elimination or permanent removal” of Muslims from large parts of Bosnia in pursuit of a Greater Serbia.

As well as Srebrenica, Europe’s worst atrocity since World War II, Gen Mladic is also charged over the 44-month siege of the capital Sarajevo from May 1992 in which 10,000 people died.

His lawyer and his family say he is too ill to stand trial but doctors have so far declared him fit to be in court.
‘Be patient’

In his first hearing before the for the , Gen Mladic, 69, was asked if he could understand the proceedings and he confirmed that he could.

At the scene
Chris Morris BBC News, The Hague

There he was – older, balding but instantly recognisable. He saluted as he walked slowly into court wearing a light khaki cap and a grey jacket.

“I am General Ratko Mladic,” he said. “I am a gravely ill man and I need time to organise my defence”.

He showed only flashes of emotion but occasionally spoke with contempt. He described the charges against him as “obnoxious and monstrous” and entered no plea.

But the ’s summary of the indictment was a of brutality. In the judge’s own words: “Genocide, persecution, murder, extermination, deportation, forcible transfer, torture, rape and plunder.”

He gave his name and date of birth, although the date was different from the court records.

Court-appointed Serbian lawyer Aleksandar Aleksic represented Gen Mladic at the hearing. Gen Mladic may choose a permanent counsel for the trial later, or opt to conduct his own defence.

Judge Alphons Orie said the purpose of the hearing was to list the charges against Gen Mladic and ask him for a plea.

Gen Mladic’s rights were read out in court, but he said: “I am a gravely ill man and need more time to understand what was read out, so please be patient.”

The judge then asked if Gen Mladic had read and understood the indictment against him.

Gen Mladic said he needed at least two months to read the three binders of documents that had been brought to him.

However, Mr Aleksic said he believed his client had understood the indictment.

Gen Mladic then told the judge: “I do not want a single letter or sentence of that indictment to be read out to me.”

However, the judge proceeded to read out an annotated version of the charges.

At some points, Gen Mladic shook his head.

John Simpson said the man in the dock was a ”shrunken” and ”milder” character

When asked to enter a plea, he said the charges were “monstrous” and he needed more than a month to respond.

If Gen Mladic does not enter a plea within 30 days, the judges will enter pleas of not guilty on his behalf.

After a brief recess, the hearing moved into private session so Gen Mladic could express concerns about his health.

Then as the hearing ended, Gen Mladic said: “I defended my people, my country… now I am defending myself. I just have to say that I want to live to see that I am a free man.”

He added: “I don’t want to be helped to walk as if I were some blind cripple. If I want help, I’ll ask for it.”

BBC world affairs editor John Simpson, in the courtroom, said Gen Mladic had looked over at him and given a mocking salute.

At one point, one of the Srebrenica had caught Gen Mladic’s eye and made a throat-cutting gesture, to which he smiled, adds our correspondent.

A new hearing was set for 4 July.

‘Still searching’

Relatives of some of the victims of the war gathered outside the courtroom awaiting Gen Mladic’s arrival.

The Charges

Counts 1/2: Genocide of Bosniaks and Bosnian Croats in Bosnia-Hercegovina and Srebrenica
Count 3: Persecutions
Counts 4/5/6: Extermination and murder
Counts 7/8: Deportation and inhumane acts
Counts 9/10: Terror and unlawful attacks
Count 11: Taking of UN hostages

Ratko Mladic: The charges

Munira Subasic, whose son and husband died in Srebrenica, told Reuters: “In 1995 I begged him to let my son go. He listened to me and promised to let him go. I trusted him at that moment.

“Sixteen years later, I am still searching for my son’s bones.”

Gen Mladic had earlier been examined by doctors in the medical facility of the detention unit at The Hague after arriving on Tuesday night.

On Thursday, Mr Aleksic said of his client: “He has not had proper healthcare for years and his condition is not good.”

Also on Thursday, Mr Saljic said Gen Mladic had been treated for cancer two years ago at a Belgrade hospital.

Mr Saljic has previously been quoted as saying by Serbian media that his client had suffered three strokes and two heart attacks, was too ill to be sent to The Hague and would not live to the end of a trial.

One lawyer representing victims, Axel Hageldoorn, told Associated Press there was concern that “he is too sick to follow the trial to its end and there will be no verdict”.

Former Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic died of a heart attack at The Hague in 2006, four years into his own genocide trial.