Tuesday 27 August 2013

U.S. Hosting 30,000 illegal Kenyan Immigrants

An American immigration expert has revealed that there are an estimated 30,000 Kenyans residing illegally in the United States. In an interview with the Daily Nation, Jeffey Passel, a Senior Demographer at the Pew Research Center [O1] in Washington, admitted that the widely quoted numbers in the media were inaccurate.

Passel states that he derived this figure from statistics of visa admissions in the country as well as data from the U.S. Census Bureau. He states that “the numbers that have been quoted in the past tend to be quite inaccurate”.

On a NTV talk show—The Trend— on Sunday, former Kenyan Ambassador to the U.S. Elkannah Odembo claimed that close to 200,000 Kenyans in America did not have their papers in order.

However, Passel notes that embassies overestimate the number of their nationals in foreign lands. “Embassies tend to think that there are a lot of their nationals in America than the data indicates,” Passel observed.
Feeling at home away from home: Events like the IRB Rugby Series are favourite meeting points for Kenyans in the diaspora (Image courtesy of www.jambonewspot.com)
 Passel also stated that people arriving in the U.S. often register with their respective embassies. Even after they return home, the embassies think that they are still living in the country because these people do not inform the latter of their departure.

Kenyans living in the U.S. have recently found themselves in the spotlight due to homicidal and suicidal incidents. Two weeks ago, New Jersey police found the hanging body of Jeffrey Kilibwa at Lafayette Park in Jersey City. In the same state, another Kenyan man was sentenced to 72 years in jail after being found guilty of killing his wife and two children.

A 21-year old Kenyan student at Ivy Tech Community College also lost his life after a scuffle with several people outside a club in Indianapolis. Last week, Elisha Ogolla, a mechanical engineering student at a Texas university died from gunshot wounds obtained under mysterious circumstances.

The U.S. has been an attractive destination for Kenyans who migrate there for employment opportunities, higher education or to visit their relatives. A study by the Migration Policy Institute in 2011 revealed that Kenyans constituted the largest African diaspora in the United States

Within the Eastern African region, Ethiopia is the leading country of origin with close to 150, 000 of its nationals living in the U.S.

A study in 2010 titled, Homeland Citizen Perception of and Attitudes toward their Diaspora: A Study of Kenyans and Tanzanians, unearthed the perceptions and attitudes of Kenyans back home towards their counterparts in the diaspora. 

The study, spearheaded by the African Migration and Development Policy Centre (AMADPOC) Executive Director Prof. John Oucho, was carried out within Dar es Salaam, Tanzania and Nairobi, Kenya using the Focus Group Discussion (FGD) approach to collect information from homogenous or relatively homogenous groups.

Generally, FGD participants in the Kenyan study believed that the worsening situation in the job market was discouraging Kenyans in the diaspora from coming back home. In Tanzania, participants believed that illegal immigrants of Tanzanian nationality were afraid to return home because of the likelihood of prosecution by authorities of the countries of residence because of their illegal status—a testament that the problem of illegal immigrants is not confined to Kenya within the East African region. Such people were not expected to make any remittances to their homeland.

The report concludes by admitting that the emigration of Kenyans would continue because the country’s economy would not grow fast enough to absorb the increasing numbers of highly educated and unemployed Kenyans. Indeed, an Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) report last week revealed that Botswana, South Africa and Namibia were becoming favourite destinations for skilled Kenyans seeking job opportunities.

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