ROK Drop

By on May 16th, 2010 at 9:42 am

Korean Illegal Immigrant Hostesses Deported From Japan

» by in: Japan

Too bad the US cannot enforce immigration laws like the Japanese:

At least eight people arriving in Japan from South Korea have used fake fingerprints to evade the biometric checks at immigration control and enter the country illegally since January 2008, it has been learned.

In May last year, two South Korean hostesses at a South Korean bar in Yamato, Kanagawa Prefecture, skipped work for three days with no word to their 43-year-old manager. When the manager demanded they explain, the two hostesses said, “We’re very sorry,” and revealed they were in this country illegally.

At the time, immigration authorities were rounding up illegal residents around the women one after another, and they could not go to work for fear of being caught.

The two had previously been deported from Japan to South Korea in January 2008 because their visas had expired, and their fingerprints were registered in a database of the Justice Ministry’s Immigration Bureau.

However, they both illegally re-entered the country through Haneda Airport, one woman returning four months later and the other nine months later.

They used passports under other people’s names and special tapes made of silicone that were pasted over the tips of their forefingers to change their fingerprints.

The two South Korean bar hostesses turned themselves in to the Tokyo Regional Immigration Bureau in December, about six months after they confessed their illegal residence to their employer. They were arrested in January by the Kanagawa prefectural police and deported to South Korea in March.  [Stars & Stripes]

You can read more about this illegal immigrant ring at the link, but if this case was in the US the pro-illegal immigration lobby would probably say the government is violating the human rights of these women, the government is racist, and that their right to earn a living in the US is being infringed upon among host of the other usual talking points.

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5
  • Maj. America
    3:24 am on May 16th, 2010 1

    is this news?

  • Orbit
    4:25 am on May 16th, 2010 2

    yeah G.I.Korea…this is hardly a news.

  • 輝夜姬
    2:25 pm on May 16th, 2010 3

    Korea is like USA. :lol:

    Illegal immigrants in Korea are demonstrating in the face of Korean police, backed up by pro-human Korean activists group.

    http://nimg.nate.com/orgImg/ns/2010/05/14/NISI201…

    http://nimg.nate.com/orgImg/ns/2010/05/14/NISI201…

    http://nimg.nate.com/orgImg/ns/2010/05/14/NISI201…

    http://nimg.nate.com/orgImg/ns/2010/05/14/NISI201…

    http://nimg.nate.com/orgImg/ns/2010/05/14/NISI201…

  • 輝夜姬
    11:13 pm on May 16th, 2010 4

    I hope Korean prostitutes in Japan also hold firm demonstrations in Japan like the illegal stayers in Korea, demanding for Japan to give them legalized status.

    And/or I hope that Korean prostitutes in Japan learn from Phillippino juice girls nearby USA army base. Making a baby does not need much time, not money. A 20-minute play is enough to make a baby. After getting a baby, demand legal stay in Japan, for you have a baby of Japan.

    Getting these kinds of tips does not require heavy studying nor high brain. Good luck.

  • Tom Langley
    7:22 am on May 17th, 2010 5

    When I was stationed at WBAMC in El Paso, TX from '83-'88 it was a well known fact that pregnant women from Mexico would trespass into the US so they could deliver their babies here. Once they 'dropped their load' the newborn babies would automatically be American citizens even though the mothers were here illegally. Since the babies were American citizens they could be used to legally bring in the mother, father, siblings, aunts, uncles, cousins, etc, etc and this scam was perfectly legal. I believe that the law should be changed to prevent this 'anchor baby' problem by requiring that at least one of the babies parents be in the US legally either as a citizen or a green card holder for the baby to be considered an American citizen. The 14th amendment may be a problem but it does say 'subject to the jurisdiction thereof'. The Japanese seem to know how to enforce their law.

 

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