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Middle Eastern Immigration Growing Rapidly in U.S.

Immigration from the Middle East and Muslim countries to the U.S. is expected to increase rapidly in the next ten years

WASHINGTON, Aug 17 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Even after the September 11 attacks, nationals from the Middle East and North Africa continue to immigrate to the United States in droves, with one million more expected to arrive by 2010.

Basing its predictions on the theory that U.S. immigration policy would not tighten in coming years, the study by the Center for Immigration Studies, a think-tank that generally favors imposing more limits on immigration to the United States, concluded that by 2010, 2.474 million immigrants from the Middle East and North Africa would arrive in the United States compared to 1.47 million in 2000 - up from 192,000 in 1970.

In a report based on U.S. Census Bureau data timed to coincide with the one-year anniversary of the attacks that killed more than 3,000, the center tracked 30 years of immigration from the region where all of those suspected in the attacks hail from.

Among the countries whose nationals were included in the study released Wednesday were Turkey, Israel, Syria, Jordan, Iraq, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan.

The report said Middle Eastern immigrants were highly educated, with 49% holding at least a bachelor's degree, compared to 28% of natives, with median earnings for Middle Eastern men at $39,000 a year, compared to $38,000 for native workers, reports news agencies.

Over the last 30 years, those communities have multiplied seven-fold from their 1970 level of 192,000 to 499,000 in 1980 to 817,000 in 1990 - although global immigration to the United States has only tripled in that time.

The center also noted that the figures did not include the 570,000 children under 18 who were born in the United States and who had at least one parent born in the Middle East - a number that is to reach 970,000 by 2010.

About 10% (150,000) of the illegal immigrants who enter the United States are from the region. But many immigrants from the Middle East, from countries including Iran, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Israel and Turkey are not Arabs, the study found.

Neither the wave of arrests and random attacks that swept through Arab- and Muslim-American communities, nor immigration restrictions imposed by the U.S. Justice Department have had a “large impact on the total flow of immigrants from the region over the course of the decade,” said study author Steven Camarota.

“The events of Sept. 11 have led to somewhat higher scrutiny for applicants from that part of the world,” he said. “However, this is unlikely to have a large impact on the total flow of immigrants from the region because many individuals have been waiting years to join family members already here and the political freedoms and economic opportunities in the United States remain very attractive.”

“The political freedoms and the economic opportunities in the United States remain very attractive to a significant share of the world’s population, including those in the Middle East.”

Immigrants from that part of the world are likely to seek to influence U.S. foreign policy – especially in terms of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Camarota said.

The religious leanings of the new wave of immigrants are also likely to enhance that need for influence, as most of the new would-be U.S. citizens are Muslim, while in the 1970s, they were predominantly Christian.

In 1970, just 15% of immigrants from that part of the world were Muslim – today it is about 75%, Camarota said.

“Muslims are dissatisfied with U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East. They feel it’s one-sided and as this group grows in size, that could lead to changes.”

In October 2001, the U.S. State Department received about 1.5 million requests from the region to participate in a green card lottery for resident aliens – although there was a marked drop off in global applications after the September 11 attacks.

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