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Ice on Immigration: Refugees visiting home 

By L. Patricia Ice, Featured Columnist

Question:  I was a refugee from my native country and obtained political asylum in the United States.  I am now a lawful permanent resident.  My father is very ill in my country and I would like to visit him there.  Is it safe for me to return to my country?  If I do that will I be able to keep my lawful permanent resident status when I return to the United States?  

Answer:  This is a very controversial issue and there is no definite answer.  Before you decide what to do, however, you need to investigate whether it will be safe for you to return.  You can do this by asking relatives and friends at home about country conditions and by doing research on your own at the library or on the Internet.  The general thinking of the United States government is that if you can return safely to the country you fled, then maybe you do not need the protection of this country as a refugee.  If you are not sure whether it is safe for you to return home, I suggest that you try to arrange a visit with your ailing father in a third country adjacent to or nearby your home country.  That way, you would not have to enter your home country and the United States government will not question why you went back home.

Once you become a United States citizen, if you think it is safe, you may freely visit your native country without questions from the United States government.

 

L. Patricia Ice

Featured IMDiversity Immigration Columnist L. Patricia Ice is an attorney and counselor who has taught immigration law at Mississippi College School of Law in Jackson, and also contributes regular immigration advice stories to La Noticia and The Jackson Advocate.  A practicing attorney, Ms. Ice has recently taken on a two-year role as an Equal Justice Works Katrina Legal Fellow, focusing on immigrant employment issues as fair labor standards, and wage and hour problems, in areas around the Gulf Coast.  She is also dedicated to immigrants rights advocacy, and serves on the Board of the non-profit rights education group, MIRA: The Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance at www.yourmira.org.

Articles in this column are Copyright 2006 L. Patricia Ice.  All rights reserved.  Please do not reproduce further without seeking the permission of the author.

IMDiversity.com is committed to presenting diverse points of view. However, the viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or employees at IMD.

 

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