INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE 2006 DIVERSITY IMMIGRANT
VISA PROGRAM (DV-2006)
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 instructions for the 2006 Diversity Immigrant Visa
Program are also available in PDF Format.
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-2006, 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.
ENTRIES FOR THE DV-2006 DIVERSITY VISA
LOTTERY MUST BE SUBMITTED ELECTRONICALLY BETWEEN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5,
2004 AND FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 2005. APPLICANTS MAY ACCESS THE ELECTRONIC
DIVERSITY VISA ENTRY FORM AT 'WWW.DVLOTTERY.STATE.GOV' DURING THE
REGISTRATION PERIOD BEGINNING NOON NOVEMBER5. PAPER ENTRIES WILL NOT BE
ACCEPTED. APPLICANTS ARE STRONGLY ENCOURAGED TO NOT WAIT UNTIL THE LAST
WEEK OF THE REGISTRATION PERIOD TO ENTER. HEAVY DEMAND MAY RESULT IN
DELAYS. NO ENTRIES WILL BE ACCEPTED AFTER NOON ON JANUARY 7, 2005.
REQUIREMENTS FOR ENTRY
- Applicant must be a native of one of
the countries listed beginning on page 13. See “List Of Countries By
Region Whose Natives Qualify.”
Native of a country whose
natives qualify: In most cases this means the country in
which the applicant was born. However, there are two other ways a
person may be able to qualify. First, if a person was born in a country
whose natives are ineligible but his/her spouse was born in a country
whose natives are eligible, such person can claim the spouse's country
of birth provided both the applicant and spouse are issued visas and
enter the U.S. simultaneously. Second, if a person was born in a
country whose natives are ineligible, but neither of his/her parents was
born there or resided there at the time of his/her birth, such person
may claim nativity in one of the parents' country of birth if it is a
country whose natives qualify for the DV-2006 program.
- Applicant must meet either the
education or training requirement of the DV program.
Education or Training: An
applicant must have EITHER a high school education or its equivalent,
defined as successful completion of a 12-year course of elementary and
secondary education; OR two years of work experience within the past
five years in an occupation requiring at least two years of training or
experience to perform. The U.S. Department of Labor's O*Net OnLine
database will be used to determine qualifying work experience.
If the applicant cannot meet these
requirements, he or she should NOT submit an entry to the DV program.
The term "country" in this notice includes countries,
economies and other jurisdictions explicitly listed beginning on page
13.
PROCEDURES FOR SUBMITTING AN ENTRY TO
DV-2006
- The Department of State will only
accept completed Electronic Diversity Visa Entry Forms submitted
electronically at http://www.dvlottery.state.gov/
during the registration period beginning at 12:00 pm EST (GMT-5) on
November 5, 2004 and ending at 12:00 pm EST (GMT-5) on January 7, 2005.
- All entries by an applicant will be
disqualified if more than ONE entry for the applicant is received,
regardless of who submitted the entry. Applicants may prepare and
submit their own entries, or have someone submit the entry for them.
- Successfully registered entries will result in
the display of a confirmation screen containing the applicant's name,
date of birth, country of chargeability, and a date/time stamp. The
applicant may print this confirmation screen for his/her records using
the print function of their web browser.
- Paper entries will not be accepted.
- The entry will be disqualified if all required
photos are not submitted. Recent photographs of the applicant and
his/her spouse and each child under 21 years of age, including all
natural children as well as all legally-adopted and stepchildren
(except a child who is already a U.S. citizen or a Legal Permanent
Resident), even if a child no longer resides with the applicant or is
not intended to immigrate under the DV program, must be submitted
electronically with the Electronic Diversity Visa Entry Form. Group or
family photos will not be accepted; there must be a separate photo for
each family member.
A digital photo (image) of each applicant, his/her spouse, and children
must be submitted on-line with the EDV Entry Form. The image file can
be produced either by taking a new digital photograph or by scanning a
photographic print with a digital scanner.
Instructions for Submitting a Digital
Photo (Image)
The image file must adhere to the following
compositional specifications and technical specifications and can be
produced in one of the following ways:
- Taking a new digital image.
- Using a digital scanner to scan a submitted
photograph.
Compositional Specifications:
The submitted digital image must conform to
the following compositional specifications or the entry will be
disqualified.
- Head Position
- Person being photographed must directly
face the camera.
- Head of the person should not be tilted up,
down, or to the side.
- Head of the person should cover about 50%
of the area of the photo.
- Background
- Person being photographed should be in
front of a neutral, light-colored background.
- Dark or patterned backgrounds are not
acceptable.
- Focus
- Decorative Items
- Photos in which the person being
photographed is wearing sunglasses or other items that detract from the
face will not be accepted.
- Head Coverings and Hats
- Photos of applicants wearing head coverings
or hats are only acceptable due to religious beliefs, and even then,
may not obscure any portion of the face of the applicant.
- Photos of applicants with tribal or other
headgear not specifically religious in nature will not be accepted.
- Photos of military, airline, or other
personnel wearing hats will not be accepted.
Technical Specifications:
The submitted digital photograph must
conform to the following specifications or the system will
automatically reject the EDV Entry Form and notify the sender.
- Taking a New Digital Image. If
a new digital image is taken, it must meet the following
specifications:
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The image must be in the Joint Photographic
Experts Group (JPEG) format.
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The maximum image file size will be
sixty-two thousand five hundred (62,500) bytes.
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320 pixels high by 240 pixels wide.
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24-bit color or 8-bit color or 8-bit
grayscale. [Note: Monochrome images (2-bit color depth) will not be
accepted.]
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- Scanning a Submitted Photograph. Before
a photographic print is scanned, it must meet the following
specifications:
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2 inches by 2 inches (50mm x 50mm) square.
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The image must be either in color or
grayscale.
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The photographic print must also meet the
Compositional Specifications. If the photographic print meets the Print
Size, Print Color, and Compositional Specifications, scan the print
using the following scanner specifications.
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Scanned at a resolution of 150 dots per inch
(dpi).
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The image must be in the Joint Photographic
Experts Group (JPEG) format.
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The maximum image file size will be
sixty-two thousand five hundred (62,500) bytes.
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300 by 300 pixels.
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24-bit color or 8-bit color or 8-bit
grayscale. [Note: Monochrome images (2-bit color depth) will not be
accepted.]
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THE ENTRY
There is only one way to enter the DV-2006
lottery. Applicants must submit an Electronic Diversity Visa Entry Form
(EDV Entry Form), which is accessible only at http://www.dvlottery.state.gov/.
Failure to complete the form in its entirety will disqualify the
applicant's entry. Applicants will be asked to submit the following
information on the EDV Entry Form.
- FULL NAME - Last/Family
Name, First Name, Middle name
- DATE OF BIRTH - Day,
Month, Year
- GENDER - Male or Female
- CITY/TOWN OF BIRTH
- COUNTRY OF BIRTH - The
name of the country should be that which is currently in use for the
place where the applicant was born.
- APPLICANT PHOTOGRAPH - See
page 2 for information on photo specifications.
- MAILING ADDRESS - Address,
City/Town, District/Country/Province/State, Postal Code/Zip Code,
Country
- PHONE NUMBER (optional)
- E-MAIL ADDRESS (optional)
- COUNTRY OF ELIGIBILITY IF THE
APPLICANT'S NATIVE COUNTRY IS DIFFERENT FROM COUNTRY OF BIRTH -
If the applicant is claiming nativity in a country other than his/her
place of birth, this information must be indicated on the entry.
- MARITAL STATUS -
Unmarried, Married, Divorced, Widowed, Legally Separated
- NUMBER OF CHILDREN THAT ARE
UNMARRIED AND UNDER 21 YEARS OF AGE – Except children that
are either U.S. legal permanent residents or American citizens.
- SPOUSE INFORMATION - Name,
Date of Birth, Gender, City/Town of Birth, Country of Birth, Photograph
- CHILDREN INFORMATION - Name,
Date of Birth, Gender, City/Town of Birth, Country of Birth, Photograph
NOTE: Entries must
include the name, date and place of birth of the applicant's spouse and
all natural children, as well as all legally-adopted and stepchildren,
who are unmarried and under the age of 21 (except children who are
already U.S. citizens or Legal Permanent Residents), even if you are no
longer legally married to the child's parent, and even if the spouse or
child does not currently reside with you and/or will not immigrate with
you. Note that married children and children 21 years or older will not
qualify for the diversity visa. Failure to list all children will
result in your disqualification for the visa. (See question 11 on the
list of Frequently Asked Questions.)
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SELECTION OF APPLICANTS
Applicants will be selected at random by
computer from among all qualified entries. Those selected
will be notified by mail between May and July 2005 and will be provided
further instructions, including information on fees connected with
immigration to the U.S. Persons not selected will NOT receive
any notification. U.S. embassies and consulates will not be
able to provide a list of successful applicants. Spouses and unmarried
children under age 21 of successful applicants may also apply for visas
to accompany or follow to join the principal applicant. DV-2006 visas
will be issued between October 1, 2005 and September 30, 2006.
In order to actually receive a visa,
applicants selected in the random drawing must meet ALL eligibility
requirements under U.S. law. Processing of entries and
issuance of diversity visas to successful applicants and their eligible
family members MUST occur by midnight on September 30, 2006. Under no
circumstances can diversity visas be issued or adjustments approved
after this date, nor can family members obtain diversity visas to
follow to join the applicant in the U.S. after this date.
Important Notice
No fee is charged to enter the annual
DV program. The U.S. Government employs no outside
consultants or private services to operate the DV program. Any
intermediaries or others who offer assistance to prepare DV casework
for applicants do so without the authority or consent of the U.S.
Government. Use of any outside intermediary or assistance to prepare a
DV entry is entirely at the applicant's discretion.
A qualified entry submitted electronically
directly by an applicant has an equal chance of being selected by the
computer at the Kentucky Consular Center as does an entry submitted
electronically through a paid intermediary who completes the entry for
the applicant. Every entry received during the lottery
registration period will have an equal random chance of being selected
within its region. However, receipt of more than one entry per person
will disqualify the person from registration, regardless of the source
of the entry.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT DV
REGISTRATION
1. WHAT DOES THE TERM
"NATIVE" MEAN? ARE THERE ANY SITUATIONS IN WHICH PERSONS
WHO WERE NOT BORN IN A QUALIFYING COUNTRY MAY APPLY?
"Native" ordinarily means someone born in a
particular country, regardless of the individual's current country of
residence or nationality. But for immigration purposes “native” can
also mean someone who is entitled to be “charged” to a country other
than the one in which he/she was born under the provisions of Section
202(b) of the Immigration and Nationality Act.
For example, if a principal applicant was born in
a country that is not eligible for this year's DV program, he/she may
claim “chargeability” to the country where his/her derivative spouse
was born, but he/she will not be issued a DV-1 unless the spouse is
also eligible for and issued a DV-2, and both must enter the U.S.
together on the DVs. In a similar manner, a minor dependent child can
be “charged” to a parent's country of birth.
Finally, any applicant born in a country
ineligible for this year's DV program can be “charged” to the country
of birth of either parent as long as neither parent was a resident of
the ineligible country at the time of the applicant's birth. In
general, people are not considered residents of a country in which they
were not born or legally naturalized if they are only visiting the
country temporarily or stationed in the country for business or
professional reasons on behalf of a company or government.
An applicant who claims alternate chargeability
must indicate such information on the application for registration.
2. ARE THERE ANY CHANGES
OR NEW REQUIREMENTS IN THE APPLICATION PROCEDURES FOR THIS DIVERSITY
VISA REGISTRATION?
All DV-2006 lottery entries must be submitted
electronically at www.dvlottery.state.gov between Friday, November 5,
2004 and Friday, January 7, 2005. No paper entries will be accepted.
The Department of State implemented an electronic
registration system for last year's lottery in order to make the
Diversity Visa process more efficient and secure. The Department
utilizes special technology and other means to identify applicants who
commit fraud for the purposes of illegal immigration or who submit
multiple entries.
The DV-2006 Diversity Immigrant Visa Program
registration period will run from noon Eastern Standard Time November
5, 2004 through noon Eastern Standard Time January 7, 2005.
3. ARE SIGNATURES AND
PHOTOGRAPHS REQUIRED FOR EACH FAMILY MEMBER, OR ONLY FOR THE PRINCIPAL
APPLICANT?
Signatures are not required on the Electronic
Diversity Visa Entry Form. Recent and individual photos of the
applicant, his/her spouse and all children under 21 years of age are
required. Family or group photos are not accepted. Check the
information on the photo requirements on page 2 of this bulletin.
4. WHY DO NATIVES OF
CERTAIN COUNTRIES NOT QUALIFY FOR THE DIVERSITY PROGRAM?
Diversity visas are intended to provide an
immigration opportunity for persons from countries other than the
countries which send large numbers of immigrants to the U.S. The law
states that no diversity visas shall be provided for natives of "high
admission" countries. The law defines this to mean countries from which
a total of 50,000 persons in the Family-Sponsored and Employment-Based
visa categories immigrated to the United States during the previous
five years. Each year, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
(USCIS) adds the family and employment immigrant admission figures for
the previous five years in order to identify the countries whose
natives must be excluded from the annual diversity lottery. Because
there is a separate determination made before each annual DV entry
period, the list of countries whose natives do not qualify may change
from one year to the next.
5. WHAT IS THE NUMERICAL
LIMIT FOR DV-2006?
By law, the U.S. diversity immigration program
makes available a maximum of 55,000 permanent residence visas each year
to eligible persons. However, the Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central
American Relief Act (NACARA) passed by Congress in November 1997
stipulates that beginning as early as DV-99, and for as long as
necessary, 5,000 of the 55,000 annually-allocated diversity visas will
be made available for use under the NACARA program. The actual
reduction of the limit to 50,000 began with DV-2000 and remains in
effect for the DV-2006 program.
6. WHAT ARE THE REGIONAL
DIVERSITY VISA (DV) LIMITS FOR DV-2006?
The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
(USCIS) determines the DV regional limits for each year according to a
formula specified in Section 203(c) of the Immigration and Nationality
Act (INA). Once the USCIS has completed the calculations, the regional
visa limits will be announced.
7. WHEN WILL ENTRIES FOR THE DV-2006
PROGRAM BE ACCEPTED?
The DV-2006 entry period will begin on noon EST
Friday, November 5, 2004 and will last for 63 days through noon EST
Friday, January 7, 2005. Each year millions apply for the program
during the registration period. The massive volume of entries creates
an enormous amount of work in selecting and processing successful
applicants. Holding the entry period during November and December will
ensure successful applicants are notified in a timely manner, and gives
both them and our embassies and consulates time to prepare and complete
entries for visa issuance. Applicants are strongly encouraged to enter
early in the registration period. Excessive demand at end of the
registration period may slow the system down. No entries whatsoever
will be accepted after noon EST Friday, January 7, 2005.
8. MAY PERSONS WHO ARE
IN THE U.S. APPLY FOR THE PROGRAM?
Yes, an applicant may be in the U.S. or in another
country, and the entry may be submitted from the U.S. or from abroad.
9. IS EACH APPLICANT
LIMITED TO ONLY ONE ENTRY DURING THE ANNUAL DV REGISTRATION PERIOD?
Yes, the law allows only one entry by or for each
person during each registration period; applicants for whom
more than one entry is submitted will be disqualified. The
Department of State will employ sophisticated technology and other
means to identify individuals that submit multiple entries during the
registration period. Applicants submitting more than one entry will be
disqualified and an electronic record will be permanently maintained by
the Department of State. Applicants may apply for the program each year
during the regular registration period.
10. MAY A HUSBAND AND A
WIFE EACH SUBMIT A SEPARATE ENTRY?
Yes, a husband and a wife may each submit one
entry if each meets the eligibility requirements. If either were
selected, the other would be entitled to derivative status.
11. WHAT FAMILY MEMBERS MUST I INCLUDE ON
MY DV ENTRY?
On your entry you must list your spouse,
that is husband or wife, and all unmarried children under 21 years of
age, with the exception of children who are already U.S. citizens or
Legal Permanent Residents. You must list your spouse even if you are
currently separated from him/her, unless you are legally separated
(i.e. there is a written agreement recognized by a court or a court
order.) If you are legally separated or divorced, you do not need to
list your former spouse. You must list ALL your children who
are unmarried and under 21 years of age, whether they are
your natural children, your spouse's children, or children you have
formally adopted in accordance with the laws of your country, unless
such child is already a U.S. citizen or Legal Permanent Resident. List
all children under 21 years of age even if they no longer reside with
you or you do not intend for them to immigrate under the DV program.
The fact that you have listed family members on
your entry does not mean that they later must travel with you. They may
choose to remain behind. However, if you include an eligible dependent
on your visa application forms that you failed to include on your
original entry, your case will be disqualified. (This only applies to
persons who were dependents at the time the original application was
submitted, not those acquired at a later date.) Your spouse may still
submit a separate entry, even though he or she is listed on your entry,
as long as both entries include details on all dependents in your
family. See question 10 above.
12. MUST EACH APPLICANT
SUBMIT HIS/HER OWN ENTRY, OR MAY SOMEONE ACT ON
BEHALF OF AN APPLICANT?
Applicants may prepare and submit their own
entries, or have someone submit the entry for them. Regardless of
whether an entry is submitted by the applicant directly, or assistance
is provided by an attorney, friend, relative, etc., only one entry may
be submitted in the name of each person. If the entry is selected, the
notification letter will be sent only to the mailing address provided
on the entry.
13. WHAT ARE THE
REQUIREMENTS FOR EDUCATION OR WORK EXPERIENCE?
The law and regulations require that every
applicant must have at least a high school education or its equivalent
or, within the past five years, have two years of work experience in an
occupation requiring at least two years training or experience. A "high
school education or equivalent" is defined as successful completion of
a twelve-year course of elementary and secondary education in the
United States or successful completion in another country of a formal
course of elementary and secondary education comparable to a high
school education in the United States. Documentary proof of education
or work experience should not be submitted with the lottery entry, but
must be presented to the consular officer at the time of the visa
interview. To determine eligibility based on work experience,
definitions from the Department of Labor's O*Net OnLine database will
be used.
14. HOW WILL SUCCESSFUL
ENTRANTS BE SELECTED?
At the Kentucky Consular Center, all entries
received from each region will be individually numbered. After the end
of the registration period, a computer will randomly select entries
from among all the entries received for each geographic region. Within
each region, the first entry randomly selected will be the first case
registered, the second entry selected the second registration, etc. All
entries received during the registration period will have an equal
chance of being selected within each region. When an entry has been
selected, the applicant will be sent a notification letter by the
Kentucky Consular Center, which will provide visa application
instructions. The Kentucky Consular Center will continue to process the
case until those who are selected are instructed to appear for visa
interviews at a U.S. consular office, or until those able to do so
apply at a USCIS office in the United States for change of status.
15. MAY WINNING
APPLICANTS ADJUST THEIR STATUS WITH USCIS?
Yes, provided they are otherwise eligible to
adjust status under the terms of Section 245 of the INA, selected
applicants who are physically present in the United States may apply to
the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) for adjustment of
status to permanent resident. Applicants must ensure that
USCIS can complete action on their cases, including processing of
any overseas derivatives, before September 30, 2006, since on that date
registrations for the DV-2006 program expire. No visa numbers for the
DV-2006 program will be available after midnight on September 30, 2006
under any circumstances.
16. WILL APPLICANTS WHO
ARE NOT SELECTED BE INFORMED?
No, applicants who are not selected will receive
no response to their entry. Only those who are selected will be
informed. All notification letters are sent within about five to seven
months from the end of the application period to the address indicated
on the entry. Since there is no notification provided to those not
selected, anyone who does not receive a letter about five to seven
months from the end of the registration period should assume that
his/her application has not been selected.
17. HOW MANY APPLICANTS
WILL BE SELECTED?
There are 50,000 DV visas available for DV-2006, but more than that
number of individuals will be selected. Because it is likely that some
of the first 50,000 persons who are selected will not qualify for visas
or pursue their cases to visa issuance, more than 50,000 entries will
be selected by the Kentucky Consular Center to ensure that all of the
available DV visas are issued. However, this also means that there will
not be a sufficient number of visas for all those who are initially
selected. All applicants who are selected will be informed promptly of
their place on the list. Interviews with those selected will begin in
early October 2005. The Kentucky Consular Center will send appointment
letters to selected applicants four to six weeks before the scheduled
interviews with U.S. consular officers at overseas posts. Each month
visas will be issued, visa number availability permitting, to those
applicants who are ready for issuance during that month. Once all of
the 50,000 DV visas have been issued, the program for the year will
end. In principle, visa numbers could be finished before September
2006. Selected applicants who wish to receive visas must be prepared to
act promptly on their cases. Random selection by the Kentucky
Consular Center computer does not automatically guarantee that you will
receive a visa.
18. IS THERE A MINIMUM
AGE FOR APPLICANTS TO APPLY FOR THE DV PROGRAM?
There is no minimum age to apply for the program,
but the requirement of a high school education or work experience for
each principal applicant at the time of application will effectively
disqualify most persons who are under age 18.
19. ARE THERE ANY FEES
FOR THE DV PROGRAM?
There is no fee for submitting an entry. A special
DV case processing fee will be payable later by persons
whose entries are
actually selected and processed at a U.S. consular
section for this year's program. DV applicants, like other
immigrant visa applicants, must also pay the regular visa fees at the
time of visa application. Details of required fees will be included
with the instructions sent by the Kentucky Consular Center to
applicants who are selected.
20. ARE DV APPLICANTS
SPECIALLY ENTITLED TO APPLY FOR A WAIVER OF ANY OF
THE GROUNDS OF VISA INELIGIBILITY?
No. Applicants are subject to all grounds of
ineligibility for immigrant visas specified in the Immigration and
Nationality Act. There are no special provisions for the waiver of any
ground of visa ineligibility other than those ordinarily provided in
the Act.
21. MAY PERSONS WHO ARE
ALREADY REGISTERED FOR AN IMMIGRANT VISA IN ANOTHER
CATEGORY APPLY FOR THE DV PROGRAM?
Yes, such persons may apply for the DV program.
22. HOW LONG DO
APPLICANTS WHO ARE SELECTED REMAIN ENTITLED TO APPLY FOR
VISAS IN THE DV CATEGORY?
Persons selected in the DV-2006 lottery are
entitled to apply for visa issuance only during fiscal year 2006, i.e.,
from October 2005 through September 2006. Applicants must
obtain the DV visa or adjust status by the end of the Fiscal Year
(September 30, 2006). There is no carry-over of DV benefits
into the next year for persons who are selected but who do not obtain
visas during FY-2006. Also, spouses and children who derive status from
a DV-2006 registration can only obtain visas in the DV category between
October 2005 and September 2006. Applicants who apply overseas will
receive an appointment letter from the Kentucky Consular Center four to
six weeks before the scheduled appointment.
23. WHEN WILL E-DV ONLINE BE AVAILABLE?
Online entry will become available at 12:00 pm EST
(GMT-5) on November 5, 2004 and will end at 12:00 pm EST (GMT-5) on
January 7, 2005.
24. WILL I BE ABLE TO DOWNLOAD AND SAVE
THE E-DV ENTRY FORM TO A MICROSOFT WORD PROGRAM (OR OTHER SUITABLE
PROGRAM) AND THEN FILL IT OUT?
No, you will not be able to save the form into
another program for completion and submission later. The E-DV Entry
Form is a Web form only. This makes it more "universal" than a
proprietary word processor format. Additionally, it does require that
the information be filled in and submitted while on-line.
25. IF I DON'T HAVE ACCESS TO A SCANNER,
CAN I SEND PHOTOS TO MY RELATIVE IN THE U.S. TO SCAN THE PHOTOS, SAVE
THE PHOTOS TO A DISKETTE, AND THEN MAIL THE DISKETTE BACK TO ME TO
APPLY?
Yes, this can be done as long as the photo meets
the photo requirements in the instructions, and the photo is
electronically submitted with, and at the same time the E-DV online
entry is submitted. The applicant must already have the scanned photo
file when they submit the entry on-line. The photo cannot be submitted
separate from the online application. Only one on-line entry by or for
each person can be submitted. Multiple submissions will disqualify the
entry for that person for DV-2006. The entire entry (photo and
application together) can be submitted electronically from the United
States.
26. CAN I SAVE THE FORM ON-LINE SO THAT I
CAN FILL OUT PART AND THEN COME BACK LATER AND COMPLETE THE REMAINDER?
No, this cannot be done. The E-DV Entry Form is
designed to be completed and submitted at one time. However, because
the form is in two parts, and because of possible network interruptions
and delays, the E-DV system is designed to handle up to sixty (60)
minutes between downloading of the form and when the entry is received
at the E-DV web site after being submitted online. If more than sixty
minutes elapses, and the entry has not been electronically received,
the information received so far is discarded. This is done so that
there is no possibility that a full entry could accidentally be
interpreted as a duplicate of a previous partial entry. For example,
suppose an applicant with a wife and child sends a filled in E-DV Entry
Form Part One and then receives Form Part Two, but there is a delay
before sending Part Two because of trouble finding the file which holds
the child's photograph. If the filled in Form Part Two is sent by the
applicant and received by the E-DV website within sixty (60) minutes
then there is no problem, but if the Form Part Two is received after
sixty (60) minutes has elapsed then the applicant will be informed that
they need to start over for the entire entry. The DV-2006 instructions
explain clearly and completely what information needs to be gathered to
fill in the form. This way you can be fully prepared, making sure you
have all of the information needed, before you start to complete the
form on-line.
27. IF THE SUBMITTED DIGITAL IMAGES DO NOT
CONFORM TO THE SPECIFICATIONS, THE PROCEDURES STATE THAT THE SYSTEM
WILL AUTOMATICALLY REJECT THE E-DV ENTRY FORM AND NOTIFY THE SENDER.
DOES THIS MEAN I WILL BE ABLE RE-SUBMIT MY ENTRY?
Yes, the entry can be resubmitted. Since the entry
was automatically rejected it was not actually considered as submitted
to the E-DV website. It does not count as a submitted E-DV entry, and
no confirmation notice of receipt is sent. If there are problems with
the digital photograph sent because it does not conform to the
requirements, it is automatically rejected by the E-DV website.
However, the amount of time it takes the rejection message to reach the
sender is unpredictable due to the nature of the Internet. If the
problems can be fixed by the applicant, and the Form Part One or Two
re-sent within sixty (60) minutes then there is no problem. Otherwise
the submission process will have to be started over. An applicant can
try to submit an application as many times as is necessary until a
complete application is received and the confirmation notice sent.
28. WILL THE ELECTRONIC CONFIRMATION
NOTICE THAT THE COMPLETED E-DV ENTRY FORM HAS BEEN RECEIVED THROUGH THE
ONLINE SYSTEM BE SENT IMMEDIATELY AFTER SUBMISSION?
The response from the E-DV website which contains
confirmation of the receipt of an acceptable E-DV Entry Form is sent by
the E-DV website immediately, but how long it takes the response to
reach the sender is unpredictable due to the nature of the Internet. If
many minutes have elapsed since pressing the ‘Submit' button there is
no harm in pressing the ‘Submit' button a second time. The E-DV system
will not be confused by a situation where the ‘Submit' button is hit a
second time because no confirmation response has been received. An
applicant can try to submit an application as many times as is
necessary until a complete application is received and the confirmation
notice sent.
LIST OF COUNTRIES BY REGION
WHOSE NATIVES QUALIFY
The lists below show the countries whose natives
are QUALIFIED within each geographic region for this diversity program.
The determination of countries within each region is based on
information provided by the Geographer of the Department of State. The
countries whose natives do not qualify for the DV-2006 program were
identified by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)
according to the formula in Section 203(c) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act. Dependent areas overseas are included
within the region of the governing country. The
countries whose natives do NOT qualify for this diversity program
(because they are the principal source countries of Family-Sponsored
and Employment-Based immigration, or "high admission" countries) are
noted after the respective regional lists.
AFRICA
Algeria
|
Libya |
Angola
|
Madagascar |
Benin
|
Malawi |
Botswana
|
Mali |
Burkina Faso
|
Mauritania |
Burundi
|
Mauritius |
Cameroon
|
Morocco |
Cape Verde
|
Mozambique |
Central African Republic
|
Namibia |
Chad
|
Niger |
Comoros
|
Nigeria |
Congo
|
Rwanda |
Congo, Democratic Republic of
the
|
Sao Tome and Principe |
Cote D'Ivoire (Ivory Coast)
|
Senegal |
Djibouti
|
Seychelles |
Egypt
|
Sierra Leone |
Equatorial Guinea
|
Somalia |
Eritrea
|
South Africa |
Ethiopia
|
Sudan |
Gabon
|
Swaziland |
Gambia, The
|
Tanzania |
Ghana
|
Togo |
Guinea
|
Tunisia |
Guinea-Bissau
|
Uganda |
Kenya
|
Zambia |
Lesotho
|
Zimbabwe |
| Liberia |
|
LIST OF COUNTRIES BY REGION
WHOSE NATIVES QUALIFY
ASIA
| Afghanistan |
Lebanon |
| Bahrain |
Malaysia |
| Bangladesh |
Maldives |
| Bhutan |
Mongolia |
| Brunei |
Nepal |
| Burma |
North Korea |
| Cambodia |
Oman |
| East Timor |
Qatar |
| Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region |
Saudi Arabia |
| Indonesia |
Singapore |
| Iran |
Sri Lanka |
| Iraq |
Syria |
| Israel |
Taiwan |
| Japan |
Thailand |
| Jordan |
United Arab Emirates |
| Kuwait |
Yemen |
| Laos |
|
Natives of the following Asian countries do not
qualify for this year's diversity program: China [mainland-born],
India, Pakistan, South Korea, Philippines, and Vietnam. The Hong Kong
S.A.R and Taiwan do qualify and are listed above. Macau S.A.R. also
qualifies and is listed below.
LIST OF COUNTRIES BY REGION
WHOSE NATIVES QUALIFY
EUROPE
| Albania |
Lithuania |
| Andorra |
Luxembourg |
| Armenia |
Macau Special Administrative
Region |
| Austria |
Macedonia, the Former Yugoslav
Republic |
| Azerbaijan |
Malta |
| Belarus |
Moldova |
| Belgium |
Monaco |
| Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Netherlands (including
components and dependent areas overseas) |
| Bulgaria |
Northern Ireland |
| Croatia |
Norway |
| Cyprus |
Poland |
| Czech Republic |
Portugal (including components
and dependent areas overseas) |
| Denmark (including components
and dependent areas overseas) |
Romania |
| Estonia |
San Marino |
| Finland |
Serbia and Montenegro |
| France (including components
and dependent areas overseas) |
Slovakia |
| Georgia |
Slovenia |
| Germany |
Spain |
| Greece |
Sweden |
| Hungary |
Switzerland |
| Iceland |
Tajikistan |
| Ireland |
Turkey |
| Italy |
Turkmenistan |
| Kazakhstan |
Ukraine |
| Kyrgyzstan |
Uzbekistan |
| Latvia |
Vatican City |
| Liechtenstein |
Natives of the following European countries do not
qualify for this year's diversity program: Great Britain and Russia.
Great Britain (United Kingdom) includes the following dependent areas:
Anguilla, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Falkland
Islands, Gibraltar, Montserrat, Pitcairn, St. Helena, Turks and Caicos
Islands. Note that for purposes of the diversity program only, Northern
Ireland is treated separately; Northern Ireland does qualify and
is listed among the qualifying areas.
LIST OF COUNTRIES BY REGION
WHOSE NATIVES QUALIFY
NORTH AMERICA
The Bahamas
In North America, natives of Canada and Mexico do
not qualify for this year's diversity program.
OCEANIA
| Australia (including
components and dependent areas overseas) |
Palau |
| Fiji |
Papua New Guinea |
| Kiribati |
Solomon Islands |
| Marshall Islands |
Tonga |
| Micronesia, Federated States
of |
Tuvalu |
| Nauru |
Vanuatu |
| New Zealand (including
components and dependent areas overseas) |
Samoa |
SOUTH AMERICA, CENTRAL AMERICA, AND THE CARIBBEAN
| Antigua and Barbuda |
Guyana |
| Argentina |
Honduras |
| Barbados |
Nicaragua |
| Belize |
Panama |
| Bolivia |
Paraguay |
| Brazil |
Peru |
| Chile |
Saint Kitts and Nevis |
| Costa Rica |
Saint Lucia |
| Cuba |
Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines |
| Dominica |
Suriname |
| Ecuador |
Trinidad and Tobago |
| Grenada |
Uruguay |
| Guatemala |
Venezuela |
Countries in this region whose natives do not
qualify for this year's diversity program: Colombia, Dominican
Republic, El Salvador, Haiti, Jamaica, and Mexico.
|