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Green Card Lottery Center
INSTRUCTIONS FOR (DV-2003)
THE DIVERSITY IMMIGRANT VISA PROGRAM
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ABOUT THE PROGRAM
DV-2003 will make 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-2003, natives of the following countries1 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, 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.
1 The term "country" in this notice
includes countries, economies and other jurisdictions explicitly listed
in the List of
Qualifying Countries by Region.
ENTRIES FOR THE DV-2003 DIVERSITY VISA LOTTERY MUST BE RECEIVED
AT ONE OF THE KENTUCKY CONSULAR CENTER MAILING ADDRESSES LISTED UNDER
MAILING THE ENTRY BETWEEN NOON ON
MONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2001 AND NOON ON WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2001.
Entries received before or after the dates will be disqualified regardless
of when they are postmarked. Also, entries mailed to any address other
than the Kentucky Consular Center addresses under MAILING
THE ENTRY will be disqualified.
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REQUIREMENTS FOR ENTRY
- Applicant must be a native of a qualifying country.
Native of a qualifying country: In most cases this means
the country in which the applicant was born.
However, if a person was born in an ineligible country but
his/her spouse was born in an eligible country, such person can
claim the spouse’s country of birth providing both the applicant
and spouse are issued visas and enter the U.S. simultaneously. Also,
if a person was born in an ineligible country, but neither of his/her
parents was born there or resided there at the time of the
birth, such person may be able to claim nativity in one of the parents’
country of birth.
- 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
in the U.S. 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.
If the applicant cannot meet these requirements, he or she should
NOT submit an entry to the DV program.
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PROCEDURES FOR SUBMITTING AN ENTRY
- All entries by an applicant will be disqualified if more than
ONE entry for the applicant is received, regardless of who submitted
the entry.
- The entry will be disqualified if the entry is not PERSONALLY
SIGNED by the applicant with his/her usual and customary signature
in his/her native alphabet, as it would appear on his/her passport
or other official or contractual obligations. Neither an initialed
signature nor block printing of the applicant’s name will be accepted
and will result in the disqualification of the entry. If an applicant
chooses to sign his/her name in the Roman alphabet and that is not
their native alphabet, he/she must also sign in his/her native alphabet.
- The entry will be disqualified if all required photos are
not attached. Recent photographs of the applicant and his/her
spouse and each child, including all natural children as well as all
legally-adopted and stepchildren, even if the children no longer reside
with the applicant, must be attached to the entry. The name and date
of birth of each family member must be printed on the back of their
photo. Group or family photos will not be accepted; there must be
a separate photo for each family member. Photos should be attached
with tape and not stapled to the entry. If there is insufficient room
on the front of the entry, applicants may tape photos to the back
of the page.
If photos do not conform to the following specifications, the
entry will be disqualified:
- SIZE: 2 inches (50mm) square, with the applicant’s, spouse's, or
child's name and date of birth printed on the back.
- Applicant, spouse, or child must be directly facing the camera;
the head of the person being photographed should not be tilted up,
down or to the side, and should cover about 50% of the area of the
photo.
- The photo should be taken with the person being photographed in
front of a neutral, light-colored background. Photos taken with very
dark or patterned, busy backgrounds will not be accepted.
- Photos in which the face of the person being photographed is not
in focus will not be accepted.
- Photos in which the person being photographed is wearing a hat or
glasses with dark lens or in which the face is obscured in any way
will not be accepted.
- Photos may be either color or black and white.
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THE ENTRY
There is no specific format for the entry. Simply use a plain sheet
of paper and type or clearly print in the English (Roman) alphabet
the following information. Failure to provide all of this information
will disqualify the applicant’s entry.
1. FULL NAME, with the last (surname/family) name underlined
EXAMPLES: Public, Sara Jane (or) Lopez, Juan Antonio
2. DATE AND PLACE OF BIRTH
Date: Day, Month, Year
EXAMPLE: 15 November 1961
Place: City/Town, District/County/Province, Country
EXAMPLE: Munich, Bavaria, Germany
The name of the country should be that which
is currently in use for the place where the applicant was born (Slovenia,
rather than Yugoslavia; Kazakhstan rather than Soviet Union, for example).
3. THE APPLICANT’S NATIVE COUNTRY IF DIFFERENT
FROM COUNTRY OF BIRTH
If the applicant is claiming nativity in a country other than his/her
place of birth, this must be clearly indicated on the entry. This information
must match with what is put on the upper left corner of the entry envelope.
(See MAILING THE ENTRY.) If an applicant
is claiming nativity through spouse or parent, please indicate this
on the entry. (See the REQUIREMENTS section
on for more information on this item.)
4. 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 YEARS, EVEN IF YOU ARE NO LONGER
LEGALLY MARRIED TO THE CHILD’S PARENT, AND EVEN IF THE 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.
5. FULL MAILING ADDRESS
This must be clear and complete, because any future mailings will be
sent there. A telephone number is optional, but useful.
6. PHOTOGRAPH. Attach recent photographs of the applicant, the
applicant’s spouse, and all children. Print the name and date of birth
of each family member on the back of each photograph. Failure to submit
required photos for all family members will result in disqualification.
See the PROCEDURES FOR SUBMITTING AN ENTRY
section for information on photo requirements.
7. SIGNATURE. The
applicant must personally sign the entry, using his/her usual and
customary signature, as it would appear on his or her passport or
other official or contractual obligations. Failure to personally
sign the entry will disqualify the application. See PROCEDURES
FOR SUBMITTING AN ENTRY TO DV-2003 for more information on the signature
requirement.
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MAILING THE ENTRY
For DV-2003, the world is divided into six regions, and each region
has a separate address. The DV entry should be mailed to the address
listed below for the applicant’s region of nativity:
Africa:
DV-2003 Program
Kentucky Consular Center
1001 Visa Crest
Migrate, KY 41901-1000, U.S.A.
Asia:
DV-2003 Program
Kentucky Consular Center
2002 Visa Crest
Migrate, KY 41902-2000, U.S.A.
Europe:
DV-2003 Program
Kentucky Consular Center
3003 Visa Crest
Migrate, KY 41903-3000, U.S.A.
South America/Central America/Caribbean:
DV-2003 Program
Kentucky Consular Center
4004 Visa Crest
Migrate, KY 41904-4000, U.S.A.
Oceania:
DV-2003 Program
Kentucky Consular Center
5005 Visa Crest
Migrate, KY 41905-5000, U.S.A.
North America:
DV-2003 Program
Kentucky Consular Center
6006 Visa Crest
Migrate, KY 41906-6000, U.S.A.
Submit the entry by regular or airmail to the address matching the
region of the applicant’s country of nativity. Entries sent by express
or priority mail, second day airmail, fax, hand, messenger, or any means
requiring special handling will not be processed.
The envelope must be between 6 and 10 inches (15 to 25 cm) long and
3 1/2 and 4 1/2 inches (9 to 11 cm) wide. Postcards or envelopes inside
express or oversized mail packets are NOT acceptable. In the upper left-hand
corner of the envelope the applicant must write his/her country of nativity
(see instruction 3 above), followed by the applicant’s name and full
return address. The applicant must provide both the country of
nativity and the country of the address, even if both are the same.
Failure to provide this information will disqualify the entry.
The regions are divided as follows:
- Africa includes all countries on the African continent and
adjacent islands;
- Asia extends from Israel to the northern Pacific islands,
and includes Indonesia;
- Europe extends from Greenland to Russia, and includes all
countries of the former USSR;
- North America includes the Bahamas;
- Oceania includes Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea
and all countries and islands of the South Pacific; South America/Central
America/Caribbean extends from Central America (Guatemala) and
the Caribbean nations to Chile.
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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
April and June 2002 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 of successful applicants under age 21
may also apply for visas to accompany or follow to join the principal
applicant. DV-2003 visas will be issued between October 1, 2002 and
September 30, 2003.
Applicants must meet ALL eligibility requirements under U.S. law
in order to be issued visas.
Processing of entries and issuance of diversity visas to successful
applicants and their eligible family members MUST occur by midnight
on September 30, 2003. 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
The U.S. Government employs no outside consultants
or private mail 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-2003 entry is
entirely at the applicant's discretion.
A qualified entry received directly from an applicant
has an equal chance of being selected by the computer at the Kentucky
Consular Center as does an entry received through a paid intermediary
who completes the entry for the applicant. There
is no advantage to mailing early, or mailing from any particular place.
Every entry received during the mail-in 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 that entry.
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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
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.
"Native" also means someone entitled to be "charged" to a particular
country under the provisions of Section 202(b) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act. Applicants for DV-2003 registration may claim chargeability
to the country of birth of a spouse providing both the applicant and
spouse are issued visas and enter the U.S. simultaneously.
A minor dependent child can be charged to the country of birth
of a parent; and an applicant born in a country of which neither parent
was a native or a resident at the time of his/her birth may be charged
to the country of birth of either parent. An applicant who claims alternate
chargeability must include information to that effect on the
application for registration (See number 3 of the
application information items under THE ENTRY.), and must show the
native country claimed on the upper left hand corner of the envelope
in which the registration request is mailed.
2. ARE THERE ANY CHANGES OR NEW REQUIREMENTS IN THE APPLICATION
PROCEDURES FOR THIS DIVERSITY VISA REGISTRATION?
The address for submitting DV applications has changed. Applicants
must mail their entries to one of the six Kentucky Consular Center regional
addresses listed in MAILING THE ENTRY.
Entries mailed to any other address will be disqualified. The information
required on the entry and on the envelope in which it is sent is specified
in detail above. Each entry must be personally
signed by the applicant. Photographs of the applicant and all
his/her dependents are now required, and the photos must conform
to the specifications listed under THE ENTRY.
Qualifying work experience
will no longer be defined by the Department of Labor’s Dictionary of
Occupational Titles, but rather by the more current information contained
in the Department of Labor’s O*Net OnLine database. Please
also note changes to the list of eligible DV countries.
3. ARE SIGNATURES AND PHOTOGRAPHS REQUIRED FOR EACH FAMILY
MEMBER, OR ONLY FOR THE PRINCIPAL APPLICANT?
Only the principal applicant is required to personally sign the entry.
Recent and individual photos of the applicant, his/her spouse and all
children are required. Family or group photos are not accepted. Check
the information on the signature and photo requirements.
4. WHY DO 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 "high admission" countries. These countries are
those 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 Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS) adds the family and employment immigrant admission figures
for the previous five years in order to identify the countries that
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 that do not qualify may change from one year to the
next.
5. WHAT IS THE NUMERICAL LIMIT FOR DV-2003?
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 and Central American Relief Act (NCARA) 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 NCARA program. The actual
reduction of the limit to 50,000 began with DV-2000 and remains in effect
for the DV-2003 program.
6. WHAT ARE THE REGIONAL DIVERSITY VISA (DV) LIMITS
FOR DV-2003?
The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) 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 INS has
completed the calculations, the DV-2003 regional visa limits will be
announced.
7. WHEN ARE ENTRIES FOR THE DV PROGRAM ACCEPTED EACH YEAR?
The month-long DV entry period begins each fall at noon on the first
Monday in October and lasts for 30 days. Each year millions apply
for the program during the mail-in registration period. The massive
volume of entries creates an enormous amount of work in selecting and
processing successful applicants. Holding the entry period in the fall
will ensure successful applicants are notified in a more timely manner,
and give both them and our embassies and consulates overseas more time
to prepare and complete the entries for visa issuance.
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 mailed from the U.S. or from abroad.
9. IS EACH APPLICANT LIMITED TO ONLY ONE ENTRY DURING THIS
DV-2003 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. Applicants may
be disqualified at time of selection as a winner, or at the time of
the visa interview or at any time during the process if more than one
entry is detected. However, applicants may apply for the program each
year during the regular one-month 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 either is selected,
the other would be entitled to derivative status. Note: Husbands
and wives may not sign for each other. Each applicant must sign
his or her own entry.
11. WHAT FAMILY MEMBERS MUST I INCLUDE ON
MY ENTRY FOR DV-2003?
On your entry you must list your spouse, that is husband or
wife, and all unmarried children under 21 years of age. You must
list your spouse even if you are currently separated from him/her. However,
if you are legally divorced, you do not need to list your former spouse.
For customary marriages, the important date is the date of the original
marriage ceremony, not the date on which the marriage is registered.
You must list ALL your children who are unmarried and under the age
of 21 years, whether they are your natural children, your spouse’s
children by a previous marriage, or children you have formally adopted
in accordance with the laws of your country. List all children
even if they no longer reside with you.
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 whom 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. The applicant's original signature is required on the
entry, regardless whether it is prepared and submitted by the applicant
or by someone else. If the applicant does not personally sign
the entry with his or her usual and customary signature, the entry will
be disqualified. 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.
14. HOW WILL WINNERS BE SELECTED?
At the Kentucky Consular Center, all mail received at each of
the six geographic regional addresses will be individually numbered.
After the end of the application period, a computer will randomly select
entries from among all the mail received for each geographic region.
Within each region, the first letter randomly selected will be the first
case registered, the second letter selected the second registration,
etc. It makes no difference whether an entry is received early or late
in the application period; all entries received during the mail-in 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 an INS office in the United States for change of status.
15. MAY WINNING APPLICANTS ADJUST THEIR STATUS WITH THE INS?
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 Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS) for adjustment of status to permanent resident. Applicants
must ensure that INS can COMPLETE ACTION on their cases, including
processing of any overseas derivatives, before September 30, 2003,
since on that date registrations for the DV-2003 program expire. No
visa numbers for the DV-2003 program will be available after midnight
on September 30, 2003 under any circumstances.
16. WILL APPLICANTS WHO ARE NOT ELECTED 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 nine months of the end of the application
period to the address indicated on the entry. Anyone who does NOT receive
a letter will know that his/her application has not been selected.
17. HOW MANY APPLICANTS WILL BE SELECTED?
There are 50,000 DV visas available for DV-2003, 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 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-2003 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 2003. The
Kentucky Consular Center will send appointment letters to selected applicants
30-60 days 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-2003 visas have been issued,
the program for the year will end. In principle, visa numbers could
be finished before September 2003. 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-2003 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. WILL THERE BE ANY SPECIAL FEE FOR DV-2003 CASE PROCESSING?
There is no fee for submitting an entry, and no fee should
be included with the entry sent to the mailing addresses indicated above.
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 DV-2003 visas. DV-2003 applicants, like other immigrant visa applicants,
must also pay the regular visa fees at the time of visa issuance. Details
of required fees will be included with the instructions sent by the
Kentucky Consular Center to applicants who are selected.
20. ARE DV-2003 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-2003 PROGRAM?
Yes, such persons may apply for the DV-2003 program.
22. HOW LONG DO APPLICANTS WHO ARE SELECTED REMAIN ENTITLED
TO APPLY FOR VISAS IN THE DV-2002 CATEGORY?
Persons selected in the DV-2003 lottery are entitled to apply
for visa issuance only during fiscal year 2003, i.e., from October
2002 through September 2003. Applicants must obtain the DV visa
or adjust status by the end of the Fiscal Year (September 30, 2003).
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-2003. Also, spouses
and children who derive status from a DV-2003 registration can only
obtain visas in the DV category between October 2002 and September
2003. Applicants who apply overseas will receive an appointment letter
from the Kentucky Consular Center 30-60 days before the scheduled appointment.
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LIST OF QUALIFYING COUNTRIES BY REGION
The lists below show the countries 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 that do not qualify for the DV-2003
program were identified by the Immigration and Naturalization Service
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 that 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 in parentheses after the respective regional lists.
- AFRICA
- ASIA
- EUROPE
- NORTH AMERICA
- OCEANIA
- SOUTH AMERICA, CENTRAL AMERICA, AND THE CARIBBEAN
AFRICA
ALGERIA
ANGOLA
BENIN
BOTSWANA
BURKINA FASO
BURUNDI
CAMEROON
CAPE VERDE
CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC
CHAD
COMOROS
CONGO
CONGO, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE
COTE D’IVOIRE (IVORY COAST)
DJIBOUTI
EGYPT
EQUATORIAL GUINEA
ERITREA
ETHIOPIA
GABON
GAMBIA, THE
GHANA
GUINEA
GUINEA-BISSAU
KENYA
LESOTHO
LIBERIA
LIBYA
MADAGASCAR
MALAWI
MALI
MAURITANIA
MAURITIUS
MOROCCO
MOZAMBIQUE
NAMIBIA
NIGER
NIGERIA
RWANDA
SAO TOME AND PRINCIPE
SENEGAL
SEYCHELLES
SIERRA LEONE
SOMALIA
SOUTH AFRICA
SUDAN
SWAZILAND
TANZANIA
TOGO
TUNISIA
UGANDA
ZAMBIA
ZIMBABWE
ASIA
AFGHANISTAN
BAHRAIN
BANGLADESH
BHUTAN
BRUNEI
BURMA
CAMBODIA
HONG KONG SPECIAL ADMINISTRATIVE REGION
INDONESIA
IRAN
IRAQ
ISRAEL
JAPAN
JORDAN
KUWAIT
LAOS
LEBANON
MACAU SPECIAL ADMINISTRATIVE REGION
MALAYSIA
MALDIVES
MONGOLIA
NEPAL
NORTH KOREA
OMAN
QATAR
SAUDI ARABIA
SINGAPORE
SRI LANKA
SYRIA
TAIWAN
THAILAND
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
YEMEN
(Asia countries that 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., MACAU S.A.R. and TAIWAN do qualify
and are listed above.
EUROPE
ALBANIA
ANDORRA
ARMENIA
AUSTRIA
AZERBAIJAN
BELARUS
BELGIUM
BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA
BULGARIA
CROATIA
CYPRUS
CZECH REPUBLIC
DENMARK (including components and dependent areas overseas)
ESTONIA
FINLAND
FRANCE (including components and dependent areas overseas)
GEORGIA
GERMANY
GREECE
HUNGARY
ICELAND
IRELAND
ITALY
KAZAKHSTAN
KYRGYZSTAN
LATVIA
LIECHTENSTEIN
LITHUANIA
LUXEMBOURG
MACEDONIA, THE FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC OF
MALTA
MOLDOVA
MONACO
NETHERLANDS (including components and dependent areas overseas)
NORTHERN IRELAND
NORWAY
POLAND
PORTUGAL
ROMANIA
RUSSIA
SAN MARINO
SLOVAKIA
SLOVENIA
SPAIN
SWEDEN
SWITZERLAND
TAJIKISTAN
TURKEY
TURKMENISTAN
UKRAINE
UZBEKISTAN
VATICAN CITY
YUGOSLAVIA, FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF
(European countries not qualified for this year's diversity
program: GREAT BRITAIN. 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.)
NORTH AMERICA
BAHAMAS, THE
(In North America, CANADA does not qualify for this year's
diversity program.)
OCEANIA
AUSTRALIA (including components and dependent areas overseas)
FIJI
KIRIBATI
MARSHALL ISLANDS
MICRONESIA, FEDERATED STATES OF
NAURU
NEW ZEALAND (including components and dependent areas overseas)
PALAU
PAPUA NEW GUINEA
SOLOMON ISLANDS
TONGA
TUVALU
VANUATU
SAMOA
SOUTH AMERICA, CENTRAL AMERICA, AND THE CARIBBEAN
ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA
ARGENTINA
BARBADOS
BELIZE
BOLIVIA
BRAZIL
CHILE
COSTA RICA
CUBA
DOMINICA
ECUADOR
GRENADA
GUATEMALA
GUYANA
HONDURAS
NICARAGUA
PANAMA
PARAGUAY
PERU
SAINT KITTS AND NEVIS
SAINT LUCIA
SAINT VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES
SURINAME
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
URUGUAY
VENEZUELA
(Countries in this region that do not qualify for this year's
diversity program: COLOMBIA, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC, EL SALVADOR, HAITI,
JAMAICA, and MEXICO.)
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