NGHIEM

11 I. & N. Dec. 541
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1966
Docket1569
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 I. & N. Dec. 541 (NGHIEM) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Board of Immigration Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NGHIEM, 11 I. & N. Dec. 541 (bia 1966).

Opinion

Interim Decision #1569

MATTER OF NIGHT=

Iii Deportation Proceedings ie-10392808 • Decided by Board April 6, 1966 A native and citizen of Viet Nail who has been in the United States since his last admission as an exchange visitor physician in 1958 has not estab- lished that because he has been away from his country so long, has refused to return, is American trained and has an American family, he would be subject to persedettion within the meaning of section 243 (h), Immigration and Nationality Act, as amended, if deported to Viet Nam. Canoe: Order: Act of 1952—Section 241(a) (2) [8 U.S.Q. 1251(a) (2))—Exchange visitor—remained longer.

Respondent is married, male, 41 years of age, a native and citizen of Viet Nam, who was admitted to the United States on Septeniber 5, 1958, as an exchange visitor until September 15, 1962. He Was granted until December 23, 1962, to depart, but did not avail him- self of the grant. He has conceded deportability and applies for withholding of deportation to Viet Nam pursuant to section 243(h) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, as amended. The special inquiry officer denied this application. Respondent appeals to the Board from the denial. The appeal will be dismissed. The special inquiry of if cer has set forth with care the respondent's educational and professional background, and the manner in which he has employed his time since he has been in the United §tates. He is a doctor and was Reaching in the Department of Medicine at the University of Saigon before coming to the United States. He was first in the United States from 1955 to 1956 and attended the School of Public Health, University of Michigan at Ann Harbor, and re- ceived a Master of Public Health degree. When he returned to the United States in 1958 he studied at Harvard School of Public Health, and was granted a Master of Science in Teaching. He then attended the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health and was

541 Interim Decision #1569 granted a Doctor of Public Health degree in 1962. He -worked in the Department of Environmental Medicine of the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene as a research associate; that school filed a petition on his behalf for a first preference which was granted by the Balti- more office of the Immigration and Naturalization Service on March 27, 1963. Respondent pleads that he will be subject to persecution or dis- criminated against in Viet Nam because he has been away from the country so long and has refused to return. Most of the record goes to his fear of the government of Viet Nam prior to the revolution in that country which occurred on November 2, 1968. Most of the exhibits consist of magazine and newspaper reports on the Diem administration which . was overthrown by General Nguyen Khanh. Respondent admitted in his last reopened hearing on May 20, 1965, that he is not well acquainted with the present government, but he believes that there is continued. instability in the political parties and in the Vietnamese Government, regardless of the identity of the head of state. He asserts that having an American family places him in a partiehlarly precarious position. It is our feeling that, since the revolution overthrowing the Diem regime two and a half years ago, at least part of the record regard- ing political conditions in that country is out of date. It is apparent that respondent has no desire to return to his country to use the special training he has received in the United States for the good of his fellow countrymen. He declares that physicians educated in the United States are discriminated against in Viet Nam in favor of physicians trained in France, and that the dean - of the medical school at Saigon had told him personally that no credit could be given for training acquired in this country. This cannot be considered. to be evidence supporting a claim of persecution in Viet Nam. Respond- ent came to the United States first in 1955. When he returned two years later for additional training he must have been fully aware of the government's attitude of discrimination, if it exists, in favor of French trained physicians. The fact that-respondent has attempted to remain in the United States and has delayed his return to his native country as long as possible does not constitute evidence that respondent will be subject to persecution in Viet Nam. If this constituted evidence of parse- cutIon, every case coming before the Board would, necessarily, be resolved favorably to the alien. Every person applying for section 243(h) relief from deportation has delayed his departure as long as possible, and must, to some degree, have charged the government in

542 Interim Decision *1569 his native land with repressive tactics; otherwise the appeal would not be before us. On April 11, 1963, respondent married a United States citizen. One child was born of this union and at the time of his last hearing respondent offered evidence to establish that his wife was again pregnant, and was expecting a second child to be born in August 1965. Respondent's wife has two children by a previous marriage who live with her. Her fOrmer husband, one Dr. Lindgren, testified in behalf of respondent at his hearing in May 1963. Dr. Lindgren also served with the United States Public Health Service in Viet Warn. Dr. Lindgren is remarried, and the record establishes that he pays support for his two daughters to respondent's wife, and that relationships between the two families are friendly. The Department of State, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, informed the District Director at Baltimore that on. Febru- ary 25, 1965, the Agency for International Development requested the enforced departure of respondent "even though this constitutes an exception to the present Service policy of not requiring depar- ture of section 212(e) applicants pending completion of the study of the Exchange-Visitor Program" (Ex. B-4). The Al]) memoran- dum, dated March 13, 1965, is quite lengthy, and makes the following points: (1) that th•overnment of Viet Nam and our mission un- dertook the training of Dr. Thieu as part of the expansion of medi- cal education facilities badly needed in Viet Nam- (2) that Dr. Thieu signed an agreement to work for the Viet Nam Government for ten years as a member of the faculty of the University of Saigon in return for the advance medical education given him; (3) that Dr. Thieu arrived in the United States under the sponsorship of the World Ilealth. Organization on September 5, 1958, that his support was assumed by the Agency for International Development on September 1, 1960, and that his visa support was terminated by that agency an September 15, 1962; (4) that Dr.. Thieu was fully aware when he signed these contracts of the reqUirement of section 212(e) of the Immigration and Nationality Act that he would be required to return to his native land to utilize his training; (5) that Dr. Thieu was not selected for training under the AID program for his personal benefit but for the contribution he could make to the .pro- grant in Viet Nam; (6) that Dr. and Mrs-Thieu were aware of the fact at the time they married that they would have to choose either two years' separation or' that Mrs. Thieu would have to spend two years in Viet/ Nam in order to be with her husband. It was the opinion of the agencies involved that the respondent's case did not involve the "type of unforeseeable hardship envisoned by the regu- 543 Interim Decision #1569 . latiohs implementing section 212(e) of the Immigration and sNation:- ality Act". The application for a waiver of the requirements of section 212(e) rat denied by the District Director at Ba'timbre, Maryland, and, on May 20, 1965, respondent's application for ad- justment under section 245 was withdrawn.

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Bluebook (online)
11 I. & N. Dec. 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nghiem-bia-1966.