Sunday, March 02, 2008

Translators for US Can't Get Visas

there are only 551 of these translators, people who made up for the lack of US personnel able to speak the language in afghanistan and iraq, people who risked their lives to translate for the US military. now they can't get visas because the quota has been met. how despicable is this. we need someone else in office and we need them fast.
sen. kennedy sponsored a bill to up the number of visas but, you know, the bush administration is slow and inefficient. here's a solution, just assign one team to do all the paperwork, give them a week. job done. it's a matter of priorities. i'd say these people deserve quick service, especially when their lives are in danger in their homelands.

By Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, February 29, 2008; Page A10


The State Department has stopped processing the applications of 551 Iraqi and Afghan translators seeking special visas to come to the United States, because the current legal quota of 500 visas for the program this year is about to be reached, according to department officials.

The applicants, all of whom have worked for U.S. military forces, received an e-mail notice from the State Department's National Visa Center last week. "We have temporarily stopped processing cases," the message said, adding that "the applicant should NOT make any travel arrangements, sell property or give up employment until the US Embassy or Consulate General has issued a visa."

The halt is the latest obstacle for many of the several thousand translators who have worked for U.S. military units in Iraq and Afghanistan, risking their lives and leaving their families vulnerable to retaliation from insurgents who see them as accomplices of American troops. More than 250 interpreters working for U.S. forces or their contractors have been killed in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. Many American service members have worked to help their former translators gain a visa to come to the United States under a 2006 congressional program initially designed to admit 50 translators per year, a quota later increased to 500. read the rest