
WASHINGTON, JAN 24: The Indian mission here has not been formally notified about the arrest and handcuffing of 40 Indian programmers at the Randolph Air Force base by the US Immigration and Naturalisation Service. No notification came to Indian missions either about these arrests or about the arrest of an Indian employed by the US embassy in New Delhi Rakesh Kumar Kashyap, for allegedly shaking down visa seekers to the US, sources close to the embassy here said. This is unusual, they said.
The sources pointed out that they recognise that the law will take its own course but formalities have to be adhered to, and the US is the first to protest to any host country if any American is arrested and no US official is allowed to meet them in jail.
Some 40 highly-qualified Indian programmers were arrested, handcuffed and paraded like ordinary criminals for not having their work permits on their person on Thursday. All of them, who entered the US on valid H1-B visas, were released after being detained overnight. Immigration authorities said the professional visa programme was being abused by India, China and Russia because the firms who bring them here ostensibly for working on their payrolls are really hired out to other companies 8211; a practice known as quot;bodyshoppingquot;.
Observers, however, said the programmers can hardly be blamed for such practices, for that is the responsibility of the applicants who brought them here.
In an interviews to the media, the arrested programmers complained that they were treated harshly and were even not allowed to remove the handcuffs even to go to the washroom. quot;It was a traumatic experience,quot; one programmer said.The programmers were brought to the US by two Indian-owned firms, Softech and Frontier, and placed at the base by the Maryland-based ACS government solutions group, contractor for making computer programmes for the air force.
The latest incident is expected to further depress the entry of professionals from Asian countries into US urgently needed by American industry.
Only last week Energy Secretary Bill Richardson said Asian American scientists play a major role in US nuclear labs and after the recent arrest of a Taiwan-born scientist Wen Ho Lee for allegedly leaking information to China, fewer Asian Americans are applying.
He has said he desperately wants more Asian American scientists. However, there is simmering resentment here against overseas programmers who locals say depress the wage rates by working for lower wages.
The financially prosperous one-million strong Indian community here has so far not reacted to the incident.