
Trump can learn from Gulf sheikhs how to manage illegal immigrants
For this reason, when US President donald trump addressed reporters in Washington following his january 27 phone call with prime minister Narendra Modi, he avoided a long discussion on these Indians.
Illegal immigration to his nation is one of the few subjects that agitates trump the most. The day after trump pressured a weakened colombia to accede to his requests for "unrestricted acceptance" of fellow illegal aliens, reporters attempted to grill him about indians who had broken the law by being in the United States.
The fact that boatloads of impoverished indians used to be dumped daily on gulf coastlines in the 1970s and 1980s has been forgotten by some in india who believe this to be a high amount. The oil boom following the 1973 Arab-Israel 'Yom Kippur' war brought them to in search of employment.
As a writer covering them in West Asia for ten years, I also occasionally worked as a community worker providing consolation on behalf of relief organizations and indian groups. The sufferings of their fellow citizens who risked all to set sail for the gulf in search of a better life are nothing compared to what is currently happening in the US with illegal Indians.
In contrast to those indians, illegal "aliens," the exact number of whom no one knows, have an easy time in the United States. There are between 13 and 21 million theories. Most of these illegal immigrants are from the Caribbean and South America. Everything that illegal persons need to live a regular life with pretenses of legality is available for a fee on Washington's 18th Street, which is lined with ethnic eateries serving everything from Ethiopian and Brazilian to Mediterranean and Mexican. Driver's licenses, social security cards, offers of housing, and so on. Going to the local 7-Eleven convenience shop every morning to be picked up by casual employers has become the norm for occupations.
Gulf monarchs treated the boat migrants who landed on their beaches with compassion, in contrast to trump or even his predecessors. As their fledgling administrations lacked an efficient method for hiring foreign workers, they realized that there were jobs available in their sheikhdoms. As a result, gulf monarchs occasionally granted illegal migrants amnesty and made them citizens of their nations.