Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
India

9,000 Punjabis Who Entered Illegally Await Asylum Status In USA

IANS, 01 Aug, 2017 01:30 PM
    More than 9,000 Punjabis, who entered the US illegally, are awaiting asylum or refugee status for the past five years.
     
     
    This has been brought out in a query under the Freedom of Information Act/Privacy Act (FOIA/PA). North American Punjabi Association (NAPA) Executive Director Satnam Singh Chahal had sought the information from the US Citizenship and Immigration Services.
     
     
    Of the 3,36,155 applications filed by illegal immigrants for acquiring the refugee /asylum status between 2012 and 2016, 9,397 were Indians. And of them, 95 per cent were Punjabis.
     
     
    Only 476 Indians (mostly Punjabis) were granted the refugee or asylum status between 2012 and 2016 out of 50,618 persons from across the world.
     
     
    Every year, more than 10,000 Punjabis try their luck to settle abroad. Each one of them pays between Rs 25 lakh and Rs 30 lakh per person to travel agents.
     
     
     
     
    Earlier, travel agents were confined mainly to the Doaba region and a few parts of the Malwa region (Moga, Jagraon, Ludhiana and Khanna) Now, they have started spreading their operations to rural areas of southern districts such as Bathinda, Sangrur, Mansa, Ferozepur, Faridkot, Muktsar and Fazilka.
     
     
    The business of illegal human trafficking has acquired a whopping annual turnover of around Rs 12,000 crore. “Several people, who have managed to sneak into the US over the past three decades, have not applied for the refugee status. They cannot raise their voice for the protection of their rights or for getting the minimum wages. They have to work in fields or stores of their relatives covertly. 
     
    Most of the times, they are paid $7 to $10 per hour against the minimum wages fixed at $15,” Tarlochan Sohal, Sheriff of Merced County in California, told The Tribune.
     
     
    Satnam Singh Chahal has written to Punjab Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh for the strict implementation of the Punjab Prevention of Human Smuggling Act, 2010 (amended in 2012 and 2016).

    MORE India ARTICLES

    India's Longest Bridge, Near China Border, Can Withstand A 60-Tonne Battle Tank

    India's Longest Bridge, Near China Border, Can Withstand A 60-Tonne Battle Tank
    It Is 3.55 Km Longer Than The Bandra-worli Sea Link In Mumbai, Making It The Longest Bridge In India.

    India's Longest Bridge, Near China Border, Can Withstand A 60-Tonne Battle Tank

    Delhi Woman Killed By Alleged Stalker In Front Of Brother, Caught On Video

    Delhi Woman Killed By Alleged Stalker In Front Of Brother, Caught On Video
    The accused had proposed to the victim for marriage. However, she had turned down his proposal, which apparently made him angry

    Delhi Woman Killed By Alleged Stalker In Front Of Brother, Caught On Video

    Navjot Sidhu Asks Badals To Speak To Him Directly Than Through Workers

    Navjot Sidhu Asks Badals To Speak To Him Directly Than Through Workers
    Says Badals were responsible for the state not being in a position to run major projects, like Smart City, Swachh Bharat, AMRUT and BRTS

    Navjot Sidhu Asks Badals To Speak To Him Directly Than Through Workers

    AAP Dissolves Block-Level Units, State Panel In Punjab

    AAP Dissolves Block-Level Units, State Panel In Punjab
    As of now, only two office-bearers hold their posts — Bhagwant Mann as state president and Aman Arora state co-president.

    AAP Dissolves Block-Level Units, State Panel In Punjab

    Patient's Relative Stabs Male Nurse With Scissors In Mumbai

    Some staff members came to the nurse's rescue before Lote could do more damage.

    Patient's Relative Stabs Male Nurse With Scissors In Mumbai

    11 Indian-Americans Feature In Forbes's List Of Best Venture Capitalists

    11 Indian-Americans Feature In Forbes's List Of Best Venture Capitalists
      The list has been topped by Jim Goetz, Partner in Sequoia Capital. He retains the top spot three years after the monumental sale of messaging giant WhatsApp to Facebook for nearly $22 billion.

    11 Indian-Americans Feature In Forbes's List Of Best Venture Capitalists