The Congressionally mandated
Diversity Immigrant Visa Program makes available 50,000 permanent
resident visas annually, drawn from random selection among
all entries to persons who meet strict eligibility requirements
from countries with low rates of immigration to the United
States. |
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The congressionally mandated Diversity Immigrant
Visa Program is administered on an annual basis by the Department
of State and conducted under the terms of Section 203(c) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). Section 131 of the Immigration
Act of 1990 (Pub. L. 101-649) amended INA 203 to provide for a new
class of immigrants known as "diversity immigrants" (DV
immigrants). The Act makes available 50,000 permanent resident visas
annually to persons from countries with low rates of immigration
to the United States.
The annual DV program makes permanent residence
visas available to persons meeting the simple, but strict, eligibility
requirements. Applicants for Diversity Visas are chosen by a computer-generated
random lottery drawing. The visas, however, are distributed among
six geographic regions with a greater number of visas going to regions
with lower rates of immigration, and with no visas going to citizens
of countries sending more than 50,000 immigrants to the U.S. in
the past five years. Within each region, no one country may receive
more than seven percent of the available Diversity Visas in any
one year.
For DV-2008, natives of the following countries
are not eligible to apply because they sent a total of more than
50,000 immigrants to the U.S. in the previous five years:
CANADA, CHINA (mainland-born), COLOMBIA, DOMINICAN
REPUBLIC, EL SALVADOR, HAITI, INDIA, JAMAICA, MEXICO, PAKISTAN,
PHILIPPINES, RUSSIA, SOUTH KOREA, UNITED KINGDOM (except Northern
Ireland) and its dependent territories, and VIETNAM. Persons born
in Hong Kong SAR, Macau SAR and Taiwan are eligible. |