Ofelia Boudaguian says she hoped for fair treatment when she and her family came to the United States in 1995
Published:
4 December 2004 y., Saturday
Ofelia Boudaguian says she hoped for fair treatment when she and her family came to the United States in 1995, after years of suffering discrimination and violence in Latvia.
After nearly a decade in the St. Louis area, though, Boudaguian says she feels let down by the American legal system, which has denied the family political asylum and now threatens them with deportation at any moment.
"We live now day by day. It's so scary," she said. A knock on the door might mean that she and her husband, Vitalik Boudaguian, and their two children must gather their belongings, submit to arrest and go to a detention facility to await deportation.
Their one-year tourist visas expired May 18, 1996. The family's efforts to gain asylum have drawn support from a dedicated group of friends, who met Ofelia Boudaguian through her job as a cosmetologist at the Personalities Hair and Nails Salon in Manchester.
After the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals here ruled July 22 to deny the family's request for asylum, the friends launched a full-bore campaign to block their deportation. They have met with Laura Bush, peppered acquaintances of Attorney General John Ashcroft with letters and phone calls, visited the office of President George W. Bush's uncle in Clayton, corresponded with the offices of U.S. Sens. Christopher "Kit" Bond and Jim Talent, and collected 2,000 signatures on the family's behalf.
Šaltinis:
stltoday.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Getting on their glad rags, pensioners in the India capital New Delhi stepped out on to the to strut their stuff.
more »
Attempt to reach agreement over the working time directive - which limits workers to 48 hours including overtime - broke down late Monday night (27 April) as MEPs and EU Ministers failed to agree.
more »
She has only been on the job for 100 days, but First Lady Michelle Obama has managed to dazzle the public.
more »
Across Europe the amount of time new mums can have off after the birth of their child varies from 14 to 52 weeks.
more »
The note was written by prisoners at the Nazis' Auschwitz death camp during World War Two and stuffed into a bottle.
more »
Spectators at a Kentucky race course were left shocked after an horrific crash involving a rider-less horse.
more »
As a family in Mexico mourned the death of the latest suspected victim of the swine flu, the deadly virus pushed its way into New Zealand and Israel.
more »
For the seventh time in a row spring will not be only a season of blossoming flowers but also a time when students all over the world can get to know more about the European Union.
more »
Traditional Hungarian herdsmen don the clothes of an age gone by as they mark the start of the summer season by parading their flocks.
more »
The jobless rate is rising faster among the young, underscoring the need for a new long-term strategy to address their plight.
more »