U.S. Visas – Lebanese Citizens
Via The US Department of State
U.S. Visas – Lebanese Citizens
- Embassy Beirut is temporarily closed, for all visa applications, interviews and processing.
- U.S. Embassy Athens will begin visa processing for Lebanese citizens as follows:
- Beginning August 1,
Lebanese citizens applying for F, H, J, L, M O, or P nonimmigrant visas
can schedule interview appointments through the Embassy Athens website
or, if they are in Greece, through the user-pays call center at
90-11-230-730. - Beginning August 1, Lebanese citizens who have an immigrant petition approved for them, and are awaiting interview should address their inquiries
to U.S. Embassy Athens, via e-mail at Athens-IV-Lebanon@state.gov. - If you have already applied for your immigrant visa at Embassy Beirut, you should inquire through the e-mail at Athens-IV-Lebanon@state.gov about whether your case can be transferred to Athens for processing.
(July 31, 2006)
Information on Visa Processing in Beirut
Via AILA
07/17/2006
Excerpt from a message from the State Department regarding conditions and operations in Lebanon:
“The U.S. Embassy remains open for business; however, Nonimmigrant Visa processing has been suspended. American Citizen Services and Immigrant Visa processing are functioning normally. American citizens are urged to continue to evaluate their personal security and to keep in contact with the U.S. Embassy for continuing information on developments.”
VISA BULLETIN FOR AUGUST 2006
Visa Bulletin
Number 95
Volume VIII
Washington, D.C.
VISA BULLETIN FOR AUGUST 2006
IMMIGRANT NUMBERS FOR AUGUST 2006
A. STATUTORY NUMBERS
1. This bulletin summarizes the availability of immigrant numbers during August. Consular officers are required to report to the Department of State documentarily qualified applicants for numerically limited visas; the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services in the Department of Homeland Security reports applicants for adjustment of status. Allocations were made, to the extent possible under the numerical limitations, for the demand received by July 10th in the chronological order of the reported priority dates. If the demand could not be satisfied within the statutory or regulatory limits, the category or foreign state in which demand was excessive was deemed oversubscribed. The cut-off date for an oversubscribed category is the priority date of the first applicant who could not be reached within the numerical limits. Only applicants who have a priority date earlier than the cut-off date may be allotted a number. Immediately that it becomes necessary during the monthly allocation process to retrogress a cut-off date, supplemental requests for numbers will be honored only if the priority date falls within the new cut-off date.
2. The fiscal year 2006 limit for Family-sponsored preference immigrants determined in accordance with Section 201 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) is 226,000. The fiscal year 2006 limit for Employment-based preference immigrants calculated under INA 201 is 143,949. Section 202 prescribes that the per-country limit for preference immigrants is set at 7% of the total annual family-sponsored and employment-based preference limits, i.e., 25,896 for
FY-2006. The dependent area limit is set at 2%, or 7,399.
3. Section 203 of the INA prescribes preference classes for allotment of immigrant visas as follows:
FAMILY-SPONSORED PREFERENCES
First: Unmarried Sons and Daughters of Citizens: 23,400 plus any numbers not required for fourth preference.
Second: Spouses and Children, and Unmarried Sons and Daughters of Permanent Residents: 114,200, plus the number (if any) by which the worldwide family preference level exceeds 226,000, and any unused first preference numbers:
A. Spouses and Children: 77% of the overall second preference limitation, of which 75% are exempt from the per-country limit;
B. Unmarried Sons and Daughters (21 years of age or older): 23% of the overall second preference limitation.
Third: Married Sons and Daughters of Citizens: 23,400, plus any numbers not required by first and second preferences.
Fourth: Brothers and Sisters of Adult Citizens: 65,000, plus any numbers not required by first three preferences.
EMPLOYMENT-BASED PREFERENCES
First: Priority Workers: 28.6% of the worldwide employment-based
preference level, plus any numbers not required for fourth and fifth preferences.
Second: Members of the Professions Holding Advanced Degrees or Persons of Exceptional Ability: 28.6% of the worldwide employment-based preference
level, plus any numbers not required by first preference.
Third: Skilled Workers, Professionals, and Other Workers: 28.6% of the worldwide level, plus any numbers not required by first and second
preferences, not more than 10,000 of which to “Other Workers”.
Schedule A Workers: Employment First, Second, and Third preference Schedule A applicants are entitled to up to 50,000 “recaptured” numbers.
Fourth: Certain Special Immigrants: 7.1% of the worldwide level.
Fifth: Employment Creation: 7.1% of the worldwide level, not less than 3,000 of which reserved for investors in a targeted rural or high-unemployment area, and 3,000 set aside for investors in regional centers by Sec. 610 of P.L. 102-395.
4. INA Section 203(e) provides that family-sponsored and employment-based preference visas be issued to eligible immigrants in the order in which a petition in behalf of each has been filed. Section 203(d) provides that spouses and children of preference immigrants are entitled to the same status, and the same order of consideration, if accompanying or following to join the principal. The visa prorating provisions of Section 202(e) apply to allocations for a foreign state or dependent area when visa demand exceeds the per-country limit. These provisions apply at present to the following oversubscribed chargeability areas: CHINA-mainland born, INDIA, MEXICO, and PHILIPPINES.
5. On the chart below, the listing of a date for any class indicates that the class is oversubscribed (see paragraph 1); “C” means current, i.e., numbers are available for all qualified applicants; and “U” means unavailable, i.e., no numbers are available. (NOTE: Numbers are available only for applicants whose priority date is earlier than the cut-off date listed below.)
| Family | All Charge- ability Areas Except Those Listed | CHINA-mainland born | INDIA | MEXICO | PHILIP-PINES |
| 1st | 01JAN97 | 01JAN97 | 01JAN97 | 01JUN92 | 01OCT92 |
| 2A | 08SEP99 | 08SEP99 | 08SEP99 | 08SEP99 | 08SEP99 |
| 2B | 22SEP96 | 22SEP96 | 22SEP96 | 01DEC91 | 01DEC92 |
| 3rd | 08SEP98 | 08SEP98 | 08SEP98 | 01JAN81 | 01DEC85 |
| 4th | 15JUN95 | 01JUL94 | 01JAN95 | 01JAN93 | 15JAN84 |
*NOTE: For August, 2A numbers EXEMPT from per-country limit are available to applicants from all countries with priority dates earlier than 08SEP99. 2A numbers SUBJECT to per-country limit are “Unavailable”.
| Employ- ment Based | All Charge-ability Areas Except Those Listed | CHINA | INDIA | MEXICO | PHILIP-PINES |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | C | C | 01JAN06 | C | C |
| 2nd | C | 01MAR05 | U | C | C |
| 3rd | 01OCT01 | 01OCT01 | 01APR01 | 22APR01 | 01OCT01 |
| Schedule A Workers | C | C | C | C | C |
| Other Workers | U | U | U | U | U |
| 4th | C | C | C | C | C |
| Certain Religious Workers | C | C | C | C | C |
| 5th | C | C | C | C | C |
| Targeted Employment Areas/ Regional Centers | C | C | C | C | C |
The Department of State has available a recorded message with visa availability information which can be heard at: (area code 202) 663-1541. This recording will be updated in the middle of each month with information on cut-off dates for the following month.
Employment Third Preference Other Workers Category: Section 203(e) of the NACARA, as amended by Section 1(e) of Pub. L. 105-139, provides that once the Employment Third Preference Other Worker (EW) cut-off date has reached the priority date of the latest EW petition approved prior to November 19, 1997, the 10,000 EW numbers available for a fiscal year are to be reduced by up to 5,000 annually beginning in the following fiscal year. This reduction is to be made for as long as necessary to offset adjustments under the NACARA program. Since the EW cut-off date reached November 19, 1997 during Fiscal Year 2001, the reduction in the EW annual limit to 5,000 began in Fiscal Year 2002.
B. DIVERSITY IMMIGRANT (DV) CATEGORY
Section 203(c) of the Immigration and Nationality Act provides a maximum of up to 55,000 immigrant visas each fiscal year to permit immigration opportunities for persons from countries other than the principal sources of current immigration to the United States. The Nicaraguan and Central American Relief Act (NACARA) passed by Congress in November 1997 stipulates that beginning with DV-99, and for as long as necessary, up to 5,000 of the 55,000 annually-allocated diversity visas will be made available for use under the NACARA program. This reduction has resulted in the DV-2006 annual limit being reduced to 50,000. DV visas are divided among six geographic regions. No one country can receive more than seven percent of the available diversity visas in any one year.
For August, immigrant numbers in the DV category are available to qualified DV-2006 applicants chargeable to all regions/eligible countries as follows. When an allocation cut-off number is shown, visas are available only for applicants with DV regional lottery rank numbers BELOW the specified allocation cut-off number:
| Region | All DV Chargeability Areas Except Those Listed Separately | |
|---|---|---|
| AFRICA | 33,900 | Except: |
| ASIA | 7,700 | |
| EUROPE | 16,000 | |
| NORTH AMERICA (BAHAMAS) | 15 | |
| OCEANIA | 1,115 | |
| SOUTH AMERICA, and the CARIBBEAN | 1,900 |
Entitlement to immigrant status in the DV category lasts only through the end of the fiscal (visa) year for which the applicant is selected in the lottery. The year of entitlement for all applicants registered for the DV-2006 program ends as of September 30, 2006. DV visas may not be issued to DV-2006 applicants after that date. Similarly, spouses and children accompanying or following to join DV-2006 principals are only entitled to derivative DV status until September 30, 2006. DV visa availability through the very end of FY-2006
cannot be taken for granted. Numbers could be exhausted prior to September 30.
C. ADVANCE NOTIFICATION OF THE DIVERSITY (DV) IMMIGRANT CATEGORY RANK CUT-OFFS WHICH WILL APPLY IN SEPTEMBER
For September, immigrant numbers in the DV category are available to qualified DV-2006 applicants chargeable to all regions/eligible countries as follows. When an allocation cut-off number is shown, visas are available only for applicants with DV regional lottery rank numbers BELOW the specified allocation cut-off number:
| Region | All DV Chargeability Areas Except Those Listed Separately | |
|---|---|---|
| AFRICA | Current | Except: |
| ASIA | Current | |
| EUROPE | Current | |
| NORTH AMERICA (BAHAMAS) | Current | |
| OCEANIA | Current | |
| SOUTH AMERICA, and the CARIBBEAN | Current |
D. RETROGRESSION OF FAMILY AND EMPLOYMENT CUT-OFF DATES
For August, it has been necessary to retrogress many of the cut-off dates in the Family-sponsored and Employment-based visa categories. This has been done in an effort to hold the issuance levels within the applicable annual numerical limits for the affected categories. Those retrogressions are listed below:
Worldwide: Family 1st (to 01JAN97)
China: Family 4th (to 01JUL94)
India: Employment 2nd has become “Unavailable”; Employment 3rd (to 01APR01)
Mexico: Family 3rd (to 01JAN81) and Family 4th (to 01JAN93)
Philippines: Family 2B (to 01DEC92) and Family 3rd (to 01DEC85)
E. IMMIGRANT VISA AVAILABILITY FOR SEPTEMBER
Immigrant visa number use is approaching the annual limits for the year in many categories, and the supply of numbers remaining for allocation is limited. Therefore, for September there is increased possibility of additional retrogressions of cut-off dates such as those experienced in August. Readers should not assume visa availability until the cut-off dates are announced. Categories which could experience retrogressions are:
Worldwide: Employment 4th
China: Employment 2nd and 3rd
India: Employment 1st
Mexico: Employment 3rd
F. SCHEDULE A VISA AVAILABILITY DURING FY-2007
A total of 50,000 numbers were provided for use in the Schedule A (EX) visa category which was established last May. Visa demand in this category is approaching that limit, and may require the establishment of a cut-off date as early as October. Once all 50,000 numbers have been made available under the current limitation, processing under this category will end.
G. DIVERSITY VISA LOTTERY 2007 (DV-2007) RESULTS
The Kentucky Consular Center in Williamsburg, Kentucky has registered and notified the winners of the DV-2007 diversity lottery. The diversity lottery was conducted under the terms of section 203(c) of the Immigration and Nationality Act and makes available *50,000 permanent resident visas annually to persons from countries with low rates of immigration to the United States. Approximately 82,000 applicants have been registered and notified and may now make an application for an immigrant visa. Since it is likely that some of the first *50,000 persons registered will not pursue their cases to visa issuance, this larger figure should insure that all DV-2007 numbers will be used during fiscal year 2007 (October 1, 2006 until September 30, 2007).
Applicants registered for the DV-2007program were selected at random from over 5.5 million qualified entries received during the 60-day application period that ran from 12:00 AM on October 5, 2005, until midnight, December 4, 2005. The visas have been apportioned among six geographic regions with a maximum of seven percent available to persons born in any single country. During the visa interview, principal applicants must provide proof of a high school education or its equivalent, or show two years of work experience in an occupation that requires at least two years of training or experience within the past five years. Those selected will need to act on their immigrant visa applications quickly. Applicants should follow the instructions in their notification letter and must fully complete the information requested.
Registrants living legally in the United States who wish to apply for adjustment of their status must contact the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services for information on the requirements and procedures. Once the total *50,000 visa numbers have been used, the program for fiscal year 2007 will end. Selected applicants who do not receive visas by September 30, 2007 will derive no further benefit from their DV-2007 registration. Similarly, spouses and children accompanying or following to join DV-2007 principal applicants are only entitled to derivative diversity visa status until September 30, 2007.
Only participants in the DV-2007 program who were selected for further processing have been notified. Those who have not received notification were not selected. They may try for the upcoming DV-2008 lottery if they wish. The dates for the registration period for the DV-2008 lottery program will be widely publicized during August 2006.
* The Nicaraguan and Central American Relief Act (NACARA) passed by Congress in November 1997 stipulated that up to 5,000 of the 55,000 annually-allocated diversity visas be made available for use under the NACARA program. The reduction of the limit of available visas to 50,000 began with DV-2000.
The following is the statistical breakdown by foreign-state chargeability of those registered for the DV-2007 program:
| AFRICA | ||
| ALGERIA 912 | ERITREA 582 | NAMIBIA 8 |
| ANGOLA 13 | ETHIOPIA 6,871 | NIGER 62 |
| BENIN 218 | GABON 42 | NIGERIA 9,849 |
| BOTSWANA 1 | GAMBIA, THE 50 | RWANDA 41 |
| BURKINA FASO 95 | GHANA 3,088 | SAO TOME AND PRINCIPE 2 |
| BURUNDI 16 | GUINEA 146 | SENEGAL 228 |
| CAMEROON 1,461 | GUINEA-BISSAU 5 | SEYCHELLES 4 |
| CAPE VERDE 3 | KENYA 2,337 | SIERRA LEONE 540 |
| CENTRAL AFRICAN REP. 13 | LESOTHO 0 | SOMALIA 160 |
| CHAD 28 | LIBERIA 734 | SOUTH AFRICA 287 |
| COMOROS 7 | LIBYA 37 | SUDAN 569 |
| CONGO 687 | MADAGASCAR 21 | SWAZILAND 5 |
| CONGO, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE 42 | MALAWI 18 | TANZANIA 148 |
| COTE D’IVOIRE 308 | MALI 76 | TOGO 1,592 |
| DJIBOUTI 11 | MAURITANIA 17 | TUNISIA 122 |
| EGYPT 7,229 | MAURITIUS 8 | UGANDA 213 |
| EQUATORIAL GUINEA 1 | MOROCCO 4,922 | ZAMBIA 92 |
| MOZAMBIQUE 4 | ZIMBABWE 73 |
| ASIA | ||
| AFGHANISTAN 80 | IRAQ 8 | NEPAL 1,529 |
| BAHRAIN 1 | ISRAEL 126 | OMAN 1 |
| BANGLADESH 5,901 | JAPAN 333 | QATAR 1 |
| BHUTAN 2 | JORDAN 63 | SAUDI ARABIA 27 |
| BRUNEI 0 | NORTH KOREA 6 | SINGAPORE 46 |
| BURMA 651 | KUWAIT 42 | SRI LANKA 383 |
| CAMBODIA 177 | LAOS 9 | SYRIA 40 |
| HONG KONG SPECIAL ADMIN. REGION 81 | LEBANON 86 | THAILAND 81 |
| INDONESIA 245 | MALAYSIA 76 | TAIWAN 398 |
| IRAN 1,361 | MALDIVES 0 | UNITED ARAB EMIRATES 19 |
| MONGOLIA 113 | YEMEN 43 |
| EUROPE | ||
ALBANIA 1,988 | GERMANY 1,047 | NORTHERN IRELAND 42 |
ANDORRA 0 | GREECE 41 | NORWAY 21 |
| ARMENIA, 691 | GREENLAND 3 | PORTUGAL 29 Macau 8 |
ARUBA 5 | HUNGARY 138 | ROMANIA 1,255 |
AUSTRIA 74 | ICELAND 13 | SAN MARINO 0 |
AZERBAIJAN 125 | IRELAND 160 | SERBIA & MONTENEGRO 505 |
BELARUS 705 | ITALY 214 | SLOVAKIA 171 |
BELGIUM 57 | KAZAKHSTAN 177 | SLOVENIA 7 |
BOSNIA & HERZEGOVINA 90 | KYRGYZSTAN 123 | SPAIN 97 |
BULGARIA 1,674 | LATVIA 75 | SWEDEN 121 |
CROATIA 40 | LIECHTENSTEIN 0 | SWITZERLAND 104 |
CYPRUS 7 | LITHUANIA 298 | TAJIKISTAN 84 |
CZECH REPUBLIC 85 | LUXEMBOURG 6 | TURKEY 1,418 |
DENMARK 50 | MACEDONIA , FORMER YUGOSLAV REP. | TURKMENISTAN 59 |
ESTONIA 40 | MALTA 4 | UKRAINE 7,205 |
FINLAND 33 | MOLDOVA 273 | TUNISIA 124 |
FRANCE 380 | MONACO, 1 | UZBEKISTAN 1,536 |
GEORGIA 323 | NETHERLANDS 88 Netherlands Antilles 8 | VATICAN CITY 0 |
| NORTH AMERICA | ||
BAHAMAS , THE 12 |
|
|
OCEANIA | ||
AUSTRALIA 532 Christmas Islands 0 Cocos Islands 1 | NAURU 1 | SOLOMON |
| FIJI 514 | NEW ZEALAND 205 Cook Islands 3 | TONGA 109 |
KIRIBATI 0 | PALAU 3 | TUVALU 7 |
MARSHALL ISLANDS 1 | PAPUA NEW GUINEA 6 | VANUATU 0 |
MICRONESIA , FEDERATED STATES OF 4 | SAMOA 10 |
|
SOUTH AMERICA, CENTRAL AMERICA, AND THE CARIBBEAN | ||
ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA 2 | DOMINICA 12 | PERU 1,274 |
ARGENTINA 86 | ECUADOR 170 | SAINT KITTS AND NEVIS 4 |
BARBADOS 9 | GRENADA 6 | SAINT LUCIA 4 |
BELIZE 5 | GUATEMALA 43 | SAINT VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES 3 |
BOLIVIA 88 | GUYANA 17 | SURINAME 3 |
BRAZIL 488 | HONDURAS 28 | TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO 85 |
CHILE 42 | NICARAGUA 19 | URUGUAY 4 |
COSTA RICA 18 | PANAMA 14 | VENEZUELA 226 |
CUBA 427 | PARAGUAY 20 |
Natives of the following countries were not eligible to participate in DV-2007: Canada, China (mainland-born, excluding Hong Kong S.A.R., and Taiwan), Colombia, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Haiti, India, Jamaica, Mexico, Pakistan, the Philippines, Poland, Russia, South Korea, United Kingdom (except Northern Ireland) and its dependent territories, and Vietnam.
H. DETERMINATION OF THE NUMERICAL LIMITS ON IMMIGRANT REQUIRED UNDER THE TERMS OF THE IMMIGRATION AND NATIONALITY ACT (INA)
The State Department is required to make a determination of the worldwide numerical limitations, as outlined in Section 201(c) and (d) of the INA, on an annual basis. These calculations are based in part on data provided by the Citizenship and Naturalization Service regarding the number of immediate relative adjustments in the preceding year and the number of aliens paroled into the United States under Section 212(d)(5) in the second preceding year. Without this information, it is impossible to make an official determination of the annual limits. To avoid delays in processing while waiting for the CIS data, the Visa Office (VO) bases allocation on the minimum annual limits outlined in Section 201 of the INA.
- Worldwide Family-Sponsored preference limit: 226,000
Worldwide Employment-Based preference limit: 143,949
Under INA Section 202(A), the per-country limit is fixed at 7% of the family and employment annual limits. For FY-2006 the per-country limit is 25,896. The dependent area annual limit is 2%, or 7,399.
I. OBTAINING THE MONTHLY VISA BULLETIN
The Department of State’s Bureau of Consular Affairs offers the monthly “Visa Bulletin” on the INTERNET’S WORLDWIDE WEB. The INTERNET Web address to access the Bulletin is:
http://travel.state.gov
From the home page, select the VISA section which contains the Visa Bulletin.
To be placed on the Department of State’s E-mail subscription list for the “Visa Bulletin”, please send an E-mail to the following E-mail address:
listserv@calist.state.gov
and in the message body type:
Subscribe Visa-Bulletin First name/Last name
(example: Subscribe Visa-Bulletin Sally Doe)
To be removed from the Department of State’s E-mail subscription list for the “Visa Bulletin”, send an e-mail message to the following E-mail address :
listserv@calist.state.gov
and in the message body type: Signoff Visa-Bulletin
The Department of State also has available a recorded message with visa cut-off dates which can be heard at: (area code 202) 663-1541. The recording is normally updated by the middle of each month with information on cut-off dates for the following month.
Readers may submit questions regarding Visa Bulletin related items by E-mail at the following address:
VISABULLETIN@STATE.GOV
(This address cannot be used to subscribe to the Visa Bulletin.)
Department of State Publication 9514
CA/VO: July 10, 2006.
U.S. Officials Arrest 2,100 Fugitives and Immigration Violators
Via USINFO.STATE.GOV
06/15/2006
Arrests made as part of Operation Return to Sender, agency says
By Michelle Austein
Washington File Staff Writer
Washington
— U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents apprehended
more than 2,100 immigration violators, gang members and fugitives in a
just-completed nationwide effort, according to Julie L. Myers,
assistant secretary for ICE. The initiative, called Operation Return to
Sender, began on May 26 and concluded June 13.
Of the 2,179
people arrested in the operation, about half had criminal records for
crimes including sexual assault, assault with a deadly weapon and
abduction.
“The fugitives captured in this operation
threatened public safety in hundreds of neighborhoods and communities
around the country,” said Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff.
“This department has no tolerance for their criminal behavior and we
are using every authority at our disposal to bring focus to fugitive
operations.”
The majority of those apprehended were arrested for
immigration violations. More than 800 of these people were sent back to
their home countries.
Those arrested on criminal charges will face trial in federal courts.
Those
arrested in the operation came from many countries, including Angola,
Bangladesh, Brazil, Cape Verde, China, Colombia, Dominican Republic,
Ecuador, El Salvador, Egypt, Gambia, Georgia, Ghana, Guatemala,
Honduras, Indonesia, Iraq, Italy, Ivory Coast, Jamaica, Kenya, Liberia,
Libya, Mexico, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Pakistan, Peru, Poland, Portugal,
Senegal, Thailand, Uganda, the United Kingdom and Uzbekistan.
Operation
Return to Sender is the latest action taken as part of the Department
of Homeland Security’s interior immigration enforcement strategy. (See related article.)
The
interior enforcement strategy is part of the Secure Border Initiative,
a multiyear plan introduced by Chertoff to secure America’s borders and
reduce illegal migration. (See related article.)
The full text of a press release on Operation Return to Sender is available on the Department of Homeland Security Web site.
(The Washington File is a product of the Bureau of International
Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site:
http://usinfo.state.gov)
Diversity Lottery 2007 has begun
The
Congressionally mandated Diversity Immigrant Visa Program makes
available 50,000 permanent resident visas annually, drawn from random
selection among all entries to persons who meet strict eligibility
requirements from countries with low rates of immigration to the United
States.
Please
Note: There have been instances of fraudulent websites posing as
official U.S. Government sites. Some companies posing as the U.S.
Government have sought money in order to “complete” lottery entry
forms. There is no charge to download and complete the Electronic
Diversity Visa Entry Form. The Department of State notifies successful
Diversity Visa applicants by letter, and NOT by email. To learn more
see the Department of State Warning and the Federal Trade Commission Warning.
As you apply to come to the U.S., please take a moment to visit our Rewards For Justice program website to see how you can help in the continuing efforts for “secure borders” and “open doors.”
Click on the links for information on the Diversity Visa Program.
2007 Diversity Visa Lottery Instructions
DV 2006 Results
List of Occupations
KCC Information
Diversity Visa Lottery 2006 (DV-2006) Results
The
Kentucky Consular Center in Williamsburg, Kentucky has registered and
notified the winners of the DV-2006 diversity lottery. The diversity
lottery was conducted under the terms of section 203(c) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act and makes available *50,000 permanent
resident visas annually to persons from countries with low rates of
immigration to the United States. Approximately 90,000 applicants have
been registered and notified and may now make an application for an
immigrant visa. Since it is likely that some of the first *50,000
persons registered will not pursue their cases to visa issuance, this
larger figure should insure that all DV-2006 numbers will be used
during fiscal year 2006 (October 1, 2005 until September 30, 2006).
Applicants
registered for the DV-2005 program were selected at random from over
6.3 million qualified entries received during the 60-day application
period that ran from 12:00 AM on November 5, 2004, until midnight,
January 7, 2005. The visas have been apportioned among six geographic
regions with a maximum of seven percent available to persons born in
any single country. During the visa interview, principal applicants
must provide proof of a high school education or its equivalent, or
show two years of work experience in an occupation that requires at
least two years of training or experience within the past five years.
Those selected will need to act on their immigrant visa applications
quickly. Applicants should follow the instructions in their
notification letter and must fully complete the information requested.
Registrants
living legally in the United States who wish to apply for adjustment of
their status must contact the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration
Services for information on the requirements and procedures. Once the
total *50,000 visa numbers have been used, the program for fiscal year
2006 will end. Selected applicants who do not receive visas by
September 30, 2006 will derive no further benefit from their DV-2006
registration. Similarly, spouses and children accompanying or following
to join DV-2006 principal applicants are only entitled to derivative
diversity visa status until September 30, 2006.
Only
participants in the DV-2006 program who were selected for further
processing have been notified. Those who have not received notification
were not selected. They may try for the upcoming DV-2007 lottery if
they wish. The dates for the registration period for the DV-2007
lottery program will be widely publicized during August 2005.
*
The Nicaraguan and Central American Relief Act (NACARA) passed by
Congress in November 1997 stipulated that up to 5,000 of the 55,000
annually-allocated diversity visas be made available for use under the
NACARA program. The reduction of the limit of available visas to 50,000
began with DV-2000.
The following is the statistical breakdown by foreign-state chargeability of those registered for the DV-2006 program:
|
AFRICA |
|||
|
ALGERIA |
1,377 |
ERITREA |
672 |
|
ANGOLA |
21 |
ETHIOPIA |
6,995 |
|
BENIN |
328 |
GABON |
26 |
|
BOTSWANA |
11 |
GAMBIA, THE |
127 |
|
BURKINA FASO |
164 |
GHANA |
3,880 |
|
BURUNDI |
60 |
GUINEA |
249 |
|
CAMEROON |
1,639 |
GUINEA-BISSAU |
3 |
|
CAPE VERDE |
2 |
KENYA |
2,827 |
|
CENTRAL AFRICAN REP. |
10 |
LESOTHO |
0 |
|
CHAD |
30 |
LIBERIA |
695 |
|
COMOROS |
3 |
LIBYA |
51 |
|
CONGO |
149 |
MADAGASCAR |
22 |
|
CONGO, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE |
665 |
MALAWI |
27 |
|
COTE D’IVOIRE |
374 |
MALI |
99 |
|
DJIBOUTI |
12 |
MAURITANIA |
31 |
|
EGYPT |
6,439 |
MAURITIUS |
8 |
|
EQUATORIAL GUINEA |
5 |
MOROCCO |
5,980 |
| NAMIBIA | 5 |
MOZAMBIQUE |
6 |
|
NIGER |
62 |
SOUTH AFRICA |
311 |
|
NIGERIA |
6,191 |
SUDAN |
805 |
|
RWANDA |
26 |
SWAZILAND |
9 |
|
SAO TOME AND PRINCIPE |
2 |
TANZANIA |
251 |
|
SENEGAL |
280 |
TOGO |
2,138 |
|
SEYCHELLES |
4 |
TUNISIA |
122 |
|
SIERRA LEONE |
555 |
UGANDA |
190 |
|
SOMALIA |
221 |
ZAMBIA |
99 |
|
|
|
ZIMBABWE |
157 |
|
ASIA |
|||
|
AFGHANISTAN |
52 |
MALAYSIA |
55 |
|
BAHRAIN |
0 |
MALDIVES |
0 |
|
BANGLADESH |
5,456 |
MONGOLIA |
141 |
|
BHUTAN |
3 |
NEPAL |
1,934 |
|
BRUNEI |
1 |
NORTH KOREA |
0 |
|
BURMA |
659 |
OMAN |
3 |
|
CAMBODIA |
107 |
QATAR |
7 |
|
HONG KONG SPECIAL ADMIN. REGION |
83 |
SAUDI ARABIA |
55 |
|
INDONESIA |
263 |
SINGAPORE |
40 |
|
IRAN |
934 |
SRI LANKA |
387 |
|
IRAQ |
84 |
SYRIA |
47 |
|
ISRAEL |
116 |
THAILAND |
76 |
|
JAPAN |
336 |
TAIWAN |
353 |
|
JORDAN |
81 |
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES |
30 |
|
KUWAIT |
15 |
YEMEN |
47 |
|
LAOS |
0 |
||
|
LEBANON |
108 |
||
|
EUROPE |
|||
|
ALBANIA |
2,504 |
GEORGIA |
331 |
|
ANDORRA |
0 |
GERMANY |
998 |
|
ARMENIA |
757 |
GREECE |
68 |
|
AUSTRIA |
62 |
HUNGARY |
152 |
|
AZERBAIJAN |
196 |
ICELAND |
13 |
|
BELARUS |
698 |
IRELAND |
145 |
|
BELGIUM |
28 |
ITALY |
210 |
|
BOSNIA & HERZEGOVINA |
70 |
KAZAKHSTAN |
244 |
|
BULGARIA |
2,131 |
KYRGYZSTAN |
132 |
|
CROATIA |
42 |
LATVIA |
97 |
|
CYPRUS |
18 |
LIECHTENSTEIN |
0 |
|
CZECH REPUBLIC |
104 |
LITHUANIA |
488 |
|
DENMARK |
43 |
LUXEMBOURG |
0 |
|
ESTONIA |
44 |
MACEDONIA, FORMER YUGOSLAV REP. OF |
202 |
|
FINLAND |
61 |
MALTA |
7 |
|
FRANCE |
340 |
MOLDOVA |
285 |
|
FRENCH POLYNESIA |
1 |
MONACO |
1 |
|
MARTINIQUE |
1 |
NETHERLANDS |
105 |
|
REUNION |
1 |
SLOVENIA |
5 |
|
NETHERLANDS ANTILLES |
8 |
SPAIN |
61 |
|
NORTHERN IRELAND |
63 |
SWEDEN |
110 |
|
NORWAY |
30 |
SWITZERLAND |
139 |
|
POLAND |
3,416 |
TAJIKISTAN |
42 |
|
PORTUGAL |
28 |
TURKEY |
1,357 |
|
MACAU |
5 |
TURKMENISTAN |
76 |
|
ROMANIA |
1,716 |
UKRAINE |
5,269 |
|
SAN MARINO |
0 |
UZBEKISTAN |
1,346 |
|
SERBIA & MONTENEGRO |
507 |
VATICAN CITY |
0 |
|
SLOVAKIA |
223 |
||
|
NORTH AMERICA |
|||
|
BAHAMAS, THE |
12 |
|
|
|
OCEANIA |
|||
|
AUSTRALIA |
837 |
NAURU |
7 |
|
CHRISTMAS ISLANDS |
4 |
NEW ZEALAND |
292 |
|
FIJI |
757 |
COOK ISLANDS |
0 |
|
KIRIBATI |
5 |
NIUE |
5 |
|
MARSHALL ISLAND |
0 |
PALAU |
1 |
|
MICRONESIA, FEDERATED STATES OF |
7 |
PAPUA NEW GUINEA |
10 |
|
SAMOA |
11 |
TUVALU |
8 |
|
SOLOMON ISLAND |
0 |
VANUATU |
0 |
|
TONGA |
171 |
|
|
|
SOUTH AMERICA, CENTRAL AMERICA, AND THE CARIBBEAN |
|||
|
ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA |
1 |
DOMINICA |
3 |
|
ARGENTINA |
134 |
ECUADOR |
285 |
|
BARBADOS |
5 |
GRENADA |
2 |
|
BELIZE |
8 |
GUATEMALA |
28 |
|
BOLIVIA |
205 |
GUYANA |
36 |
|
BRAZIL |
377 |
HONDURAS |
29 |
|
CHILE |
35 |
NICARAGUA |
32 |
|
COSTA RICA |
34 |
PANAMA |
24 |
|
CUBA |
584 |
PARAGUAY |
6 |
|
PERU |
2,197 |
SURINAME |
4 |
|
SAINT KITTS AND NEVIS |
3 |
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO |
120 |
|
SAINT LUCIA |
2 |
URUGUAY |
15 |
|
SAINT VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES |
3 |
VENEZUELA |
266 |
Natives
of the following countries were not eligible to participate in DV-2006:
Canada, China (mainland-born, excluding Hong Kong S.A.R., and Taiwan),
Colombia, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Haiti, India, Jamaica,
Mexico, Pakistan, the Philippines, Russia, South Korea, United Kingdom
(except Northern Ireland) and its dependent territories, and Vietnam.

Celebs bend visa lines like Beckham
Via Miami Herald.com
Accommodating U.S. State Department officials bend over backward to grant visas to elite figures in sports, science, arts, education and business.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. – International soccer star David Beckham and wife Victoria, formerly Posh Spice of the Spice Girls, don’t wait months or years to enter the United States legally.
Beckham’s status, bankroll and his attorney see to that. He receives approval for his visa within two weeks. Accommodating U.S. State Department officials grant him after-hours appointments and have asked him to pose for photos.
As an ”alien of extraordinary ability,” Beckham is eligible for an O-1 work visa reserved for elite figures in sports, science, arts, education and business.
These and companion visas for family and support personnel have no caps on the number who can arrive. Their numbers have more than doubled over the past decade.
Meanwhile, specialty workers with four-year degrees can’t always bend the bureaucracy like Beckham. Demand for visas from these workers, with professions such as computer programming, engineering and
accounting, has surged. But the cap, briefly raised a few years ago, remains at 65,000 — what it was in 1992. The 2007 cap was filled May 26, a record four months before the fiscal year begins.
Currently, Congress is debating whether to increase these visas to help relieve the backlog, as well as granting legal status to some of the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants.
Immigration ”law is really geared toward helping the rich and famous,” says David Whitlock, a partner who heads immigration practice at Fisher & Phillips in Atlanta.
Most industrialized countries have an immigrant pecking order, notes Alan Gordon, a Charlotte, N.C., immigration lawyer who recently helped a Canadian racing phenom enter the country.
DEPP SKIPPED LOTTERY
”How did Johnny Depp get to live in France? Did he go through a lottery system?” asks Gordon. “No. It’s because he’s spending money.”
Indeed, countries have always welcomed the elite.
”And maybe rightly so,” says Steve Hader, a lawyer with the Charlotte office of Moore & Van Allen who helped set up Beckham’s upcoming visit to the United States. “Maybe you want the best and the brightest.”
The Beckhams stand to make money on their upcoming summer trip, so they are required to secure work visas, not tourist credentials. He launched a youth soccer academy in Los Angeles last year, with the hope
of identifying talent to compete for U.S. teams on the world stage. Victoria has a fragrance and clothing line ”and still performs,” Hader says.
Some 11,960 esteemed scientists, doctors, musicians, professors, athletes and captains of industry and their family and support personnel arrived in 2005, up more than 145 percent since 1995, according to the State Department’s Bureau of Consular Affairs.
Hader has prepared O-1 visas for A-list singers, actors, actresses, scientists and even a celebrity chef. Client confidentiality precludes him from revealing names. Beckham gave the OK because he wants the
press for his academy.
O-1 applicants must be international superstars in their professions. The State Department recognizes Academy Awards, peer adulation, press coverage in ”major newspapers,” and/or ”a high salary . . . in relation to others in the field,” among other factors.
Beckham plays for the Spanish club Real Madrid and is captain of England’s national team in this year’s World Cup. Beckham was memorialized in the 2002 movie Bend It Like Beckham for his signature long kick, with the ball curving in flight. The fact Beckham is married to one of the Spice Girls is an added bonus, or curse, depending on which side of the paparazzi you’re standing.
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