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View Full Version : Bullard High valedictorian to be deported


Alonzo
06-03-2008, 07:20 PM
Arthur Mkoyan's 4.0 grade-point average has made him a valedictorian at Bullard High School in Fresno and qualified him to enter one of the state's top universities.

But while his classmates look forward to dorm food and college courses this fall, Arthur Mkoyan may not make it.

He is being deported.

Arthur, 17, and his mother have been ordered out of the country. By late June, they may be headed to Armenia.

Arthur hasn't seen Armenia since he was 2, and he doesn't want to return. The thin, rather shy teenager doesn't speak Armenian and barely understands the language when it's spoken to him.

"Hopefully, I can somehow stay here and continue my studies here," he said. "It would be hard if I go back."

The family fled from the old Soviet Union and has been seeking asylum since 1992. The appeals ran out this year.

He and his mother, who did not want to be identified for fear of losing her job and income she needs, were given an extension to June 20 so Arthur could join his class at the ceremony, said Virginia Kice, a spokeswoman for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

"Our goal is to enforce these court orders for deportations," Kice said. But "if they come to us and they fully intend to respect the court order, we will work with them."

Mark Silverman, director of immigration policy at the Immigrant Legal Resource Center in San Francisco, said Arthur Mkoyan's case illustrates why Congress should have passed the Dream Act. The act would have allowed students who excelled in school and stayed out of trouble to become permanent residents and attend college or enlist in the military

"There's something very wrong with the immigration laws when our government is deporting our best students," Silverman said.

Rick Oltman, national media director of the Santa Barbara-based Californians for Population Stabilization, sees it differently.

The Dream Act "would take away seats from American students, legal immigrants and foreign students legally here on visas," said Oltman, whose group favors limiting immigration. "There always seem to be some excuse why the law should not be enforced. Everybody should obey the law."

Arthur's father, Ruben Mkoian, ran a general store and worked as a police officer in the then-Soviet Republic of Armenia, where he was threatened by independence supporters as the Soviet Union was breaking up, Arthur's mother said. His store was broken into and the family home was burned down, she said.

Seeking a safer life, Mkoian left for Fresno in December 1991 and soon applied for political asylum. Mkoian, who spells his name differently from his son, chose Fresno because he had a close friend here.

Arthur and his mother spent three years in Russia before joining Mkoian in Fresno in 1995.

Mkoian worked for a carpet business and later as a truck driver. But winning asylum turned out to be difficult. Asylum seekers must prove they would suffer severe persecution if they return to their country.

Mkoian's asylum application, which included his family, ultimately was rejected. He appealed the decision to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco, which ruled against him in January.

Immigration officers picked up Mkoian, now 46, in April at his Fresno home, according to his family. He is now in a detention center in Arizona.

The officers left behind Arthur, his 12-year-old brother, who is a U.S.-born citizen, and their mother. Arthur and his mother now face deportation; the family plans to take the younger brother as well if forced to leave the country.

http://www.fresnobee.com/263/story/637728.html

The kid doesn't speak Armenian and has been here essentially since he was 4. He sure has a great future if sent back. :rolleyes:

NortheastCynic
06-03-2008, 07:31 PM
The first question that popped into my mind is 'did his family pay taxes?'

If the answer to that question is 'yes', I see little reason to deport the family.

If the answer is 'no', I can understand deportation.

-NC

Alonzo
06-03-2008, 07:34 PM
Most likely they did. It says they are being deported because the legal options they have are coming to an end. If they bothered to do that I assume they also have been doing other things that are legally required, such as paying taxes.

He's also 17 and his mother left armenia in 91 and russia in 95. It's questionable whether he was born in Armenia or Russia, and it doesn't specify where he was born.

NortheastCynic
06-03-2008, 07:36 PM
Most likely. These are the kinds of cases where you review the family's case and say: they have no criminal record, the mother has a job and intends on keeping it and the kid is excelling academically AND they're paying taxes AND they didn't come here illegally. There's no reason to deport them.

-NC

DamnYankee
06-03-2008, 07:43 PM
Deport the whole family. Sorry, but we don't need anymore immigrants. Close the border, and hopefully they will go back and tell everyone what a sh*t hole Fresno is. Maybe they will think twice about coming back.

NortheastCynic
06-03-2008, 08:03 PM
Do we 'need anymore' valedictorians?

Or do we have too many of those too?

How about law-abiding, tax-paying citizens with jobs?

Too many of those?

-NC

PatrickHenry
06-03-2008, 08:08 PM
Maybe go on percentages...

If over 50% of your life has been spent in the USA, you can stay and become a citizen...

potter
06-03-2008, 08:38 PM
Or we could just accept the fact that she came here seeking assylum, the state deparment found no reason to grant assylum, and now she has to return according to US law.

All good things come to and end sooner or later.

I have to obey the rules of the land too.....:nana:

DamnYankee
06-03-2008, 08:38 PM
Do we 'need anymore' valedictorians?

Or do we have too many of those too?

How about law-abiding, tax-paying citizens with jobs?

Too many of those?

-NC

There are 300,000,000 people here. I'm sure some of those are valedictorians, obey the laws, pay taxes, and have jobs. What we need less of are immigrants. And since we have millions of illegals who aren't valedictorians, it is only fair that they ALL get deported, and bar the door behind them. Let what we have melt into society and learn the damn lingo.

NortheastCynic
06-03-2008, 08:40 PM
You're talking about illegal immigrants. This family did not come here illegally.

Or we could just accept the fact that she came here seeking assylum, the state deparment found no reason to grant assylum, and now she has to return according to US law.

All good things come to and end sooner or later.

I have to obey the rules of the land too.....And unjust laws should be altered or abolished. A law that would prevent this family from staying in the country is not just.

-NC

Deadshot
06-03-2008, 08:41 PM
I think a little common sense is in order...but then again Bush is POTUS...let the kid and mommy stay...

cronic
06-03-2008, 08:44 PM
You're talking about illegal immigrants. This family did not come here illegally.

And unjust laws should be altered or abolished. A law that would prevent this family from staying in the country is not just.

-NC

ah thank you..

No sence in saying it twice so I'll just say..
I agree