Archive for the ‘Expats’ Category

First to vote: French expats rally for the Republic

Ahead of France voters inside the consulate. Photo: AFP

FRENCH people living in Australia voted yesterday in the second round of presidential elections. Those living in Canada, the United States and South America went to the polls on Saturday, casting their ballots a day ahead of their compatriots in France.

In Australia, where close to 15,000 people are eligible to vote, electors began arriving shortly before polls opened at 8am at Sydney's French consulate, one of eight polling centres in the country.

''I'm proud to do that,'' Marcelle Vettier, a resident of Australia for almost four decades, said in English after casting her vote. ''As a French citizen, I take that from the bottom of my heart - as well as being faithful to the country where I am.''

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Others said it was important to cast their vote in the French elections, given the global impact of the economic crisis in Europe.

''What I believe is that this election is very important because of the global crisis and now what has become the European crisis,'' said Christiane Frisch, speaking in English. ''The French position and French policies will have an impact, not just in Europe but in the whole world, including in Australia.''

Agence France-Presse

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First to vote: French expats rally for the Republic

Nations seek to channel expats' US money more productively; Colombia plans NYC outreach

ELIZABETH, N.J. Foreign governments that once viewed expatriates largely as a source of revenue just for the money they sent home to their families are starting to focus more on helping their citizens succeed in America so they can invest more in their homeland.

Colombian officials say an informational fair they are holding this weekend at the South American nation's consulate in New York will feature, for the first time, not just Colombian companies, but also American banks, U.S. universities and New York City government programs.

"Our government and those of other countries are starting to realize the importance of helping their communities get ahead in the United States," said Janeth Gomez, owner of a small travel, check-cashing and package mailing agency in the Little Colombia section of Elizabeth, 15 miles from Manhattan.

Colombians living abroad in the U.S. and other countries send home an estimated $3.9 billion dollars a year, according to the World Bank. But the government would like to benefit more, so it has joined the ranks of nations with large immigrant populations in the U.S. that have been reinventing how they interact with its citizens abroad.

Programs at the informational fair Saturday and Sunday include ones on investing money from New York in accounts back home; getting help for their children in applying to U.S. universities; and advice from the New York City government on health services, said Laura Montoya, spokeswoman for the consulate.

Mexico established a government institute in 2003 devoted to the needs of its population in the United States and elsewhere. India created a Ministry of Overseas Citizens in 2004 to solidify its homeland-diaspora connection. And governments from Poland to El Salvador have been studying ways to better serve, and entice investment from, citizens living outside the homeland.

With nearly a million people of Colombian origin in the U.S., an estimated 35 to 40 percent of them in the New York area, there is recognition that they are a growing constituency with the power to vote in presidential elections back home and elect a representative in the Colombian Congress.

Government outreach once focused on drawing Colombians back to their homeland, even if just for a visit, according to Maria Aysa-Lastra, an assistant sociology professor at Florida International University who has studied the Colombian model and other governments' efforts at diaspora outreach.

Those programs followed a huge migratory outflow in the late 1990s that was fueled by violence related to the narcotics trade and a civil conflict that ravaged Colombia. A tourism campaign with the slogan "The only risk you'll run is wanting to stay" featured initiatives like traveling safety caravans as the government tried to lure people back.

Now, the government is increasingly recognizing that even if an emigrant never returns to Colombia, helping them succeed in America through better access to education, small-business grants, trade incentives with Colombia or closer social ties with influential immigrant leaders in the U.S. has benefits for the home country.

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Nations seek to channel expats' US money more productively; Colombia plans NYC outreach

Foreign Governments Seek to Channel Expats' Money

Foreign governments that once viewed expatriates largely as a source of revenue just for the money they sent home to their families are starting to focus more on helping their citizens succeed in America so they can invest more in their homeland.

Colombian officials say an informational fair they are holding this weekend at the South American nation's consulate in New York will feature, for the first time, not just Colombian companies, but also American banks, U.S. universities and New York City government programs.

"Our government and those of other countries are starting to realize the importance of helping their communities get ahead in the United States," said Janeth Gomez, owner of a small travel, check-cashing and package mailing agency in the Little Colombia section of Elizabeth, 15 miles from Manhattan.

Colombians living abroad in the U.S. and other countries send home an estimated $3.9 billion dollars a year, according to the World Bank. But the government would like to benefit more, so it has joined the ranks of nations with large immigrant populations in the U.S. that have been reinventing how they interact with its citizens abroad.

Programs at the informational fair Saturday and Sunday include ones on investing money from New York in accounts back home; getting help for their children in applying to U.S. universities; and advice from the New York City government on health services, said Laura Montoya, spokeswoman for the consulate.

Mexico established a government institute in 2003 devoted to the needs of its population in the United States and elsewhere. India created a Ministry of Overseas Citizens in 2004 to solidify its homeland-diaspora connection. And governments from Poland to El Salvador have been studying ways to better serve, and entice investment from, citizens living outside the homeland.

With nearly a million people of Colombian origin in the U.S., an estimated 35 to 40 percent of them in the New York area, there is recognition that they are a growing constituency with the power to vote in presidential elections back home and elect a representative in the Colombian Congress.

Government outreach once focused on drawing Colombians back to their homeland, even if just for a visit, according to Maria Aysa-Lastra, an assistant sociology professor at Florida International University who has studied the Colombian model and other governments' efforts at diaspora outreach.

Those programs followed a huge migratory outflow in the late 1990s that was fueled by violence related to the narcotics trade and a civil conflict that ravaged Colombia. A tourism campaign with the slogan "The only risk you'll run is wanting to stay" featured initiatives like traveling safety caravans as the government tried to lure people back.

Now, the government is increasingly recognizing that even if an emigrant never returns to Colombia, helping them succeed in America through better access to education, small-business grants, trade incentives with Colombia or closer social ties with influential immigrant leaders in the U.S. has benefits for the home country.

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Foreign Governments Seek to Channel Expats' Money

Berri backs allocating Parliament seats to expats

BEIRUT: Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri voiced support for the allocations of Parliamentary seats to Lebanese expatriates saying it would lessen sectarianism in the country, reported a local daily Tuesday.

"[I] support the allocation of 10 parliamentary seats to expatriates in the same manner that Algeria and France do and the Lebanese communities would vote for them, Berri told An-Nahar in remarks published Tuesday.

He added that the allocation would be implemented by either increasing the number of parliamentarians or allocating 10 seats for expatriates out of the current 128.

[Mixing] the MPs with others that represent expatriates reduces sectarianism and the intensity of the political rhetoric, Berri said.

Foreign Affairs Minister Adnan Mansour has proposed that Lebanese expatriates be included in the decision-making process.

The Cabinet approved last month a mechanism to allow the Lebanese in the diaspora to vote. Under Mansour's proposal, Lebanese expatriates will be able to vote through their embassies.

The Cabinet is still discussing a draft electoral law that is based on a system of proportional representation, which Berri supports, drafted last year by Interior Minister Marwan Charbel.

The draft law has been met with criticism from both former Prime Minister Saad Hariri and Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblatt.

Lebanons current electoral system is a winner-takes-all. In the 2009 Parliamentary elections, the 1960 election law was implemented which adopts the qada as an electoral district and was used in the 2009 round.

Berri has voiced support for proportional representation that adopts Lebanon as a single qada.

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Berri backs allocating Parliament seats to expats

The expat world I grew up in, and why I founded DenizenMag.com – Video

26-04-2012 20:06 I gave this talk at Pecha Kucha Boston about the funny expat bubble I grew up in, and why I founded DenizenMag.com, an online magazine for international school kids. This is the first time I've ever presented to an audience!

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The expat world I grew up in, and why I founded DenizenMag.com - Video