Turkish "Birth Tourism" And Its Entrepreneurial American Enablers
03/13/2010
A+
|
a-
Print Friendly and PDF
A reader sends this: Birth tourism in US on the rise for Turkish parents, by  Işıl Eğrikavuk Hürriyet  Daily News [Istanbul], Friday, March 12, 2010
"With more Turkish parents wanting their child to be born in the US, tourism companies are starting to offer ‘birth tourism’ packages to US cities. Many women say giving birth in the US has benefits including cheaper education and fewer visa worries....

"According to tourism expert Gürkan Boztepe and media sources, 12,000 Turkish children have been born in the U.S. since 2003.The numbers are significant enough to draw the attention of tourism companies and inspire them to pursue 'birth tourism.'...

As always with immigration, American-based "entrepreneurs" are cashing in:
Arzu Geiger is an entrepreneur who lives in Gilbert, Arizona, and offers customers the option to stay in her home.

"“We got the idea when a friend of ours wished to give birth in the U.S.,” she told the Daily News. “We realized that many women abroad may also wish to give birth in the U.S., but may have many concerns regarding arrangements or safety."

Arzu and Tim Geiger have a website for their service here. [Google Translate version here.]

A bigger participant:

The Turkish-owned Marmara Hotel group recently announced a birth tourism package that includes accommodation at their Manhattan branch.

We hosted 15 families last year,” said Nur Ercan Mağden, head manager of The Marmara Manhattan adding that the cost was $45,000 each."

Link added by VDARE.COM. Contact the Marmara Manhattan here. It looks pretty fancy.

"Birth tourism", of course, creates U.S. citizen "anchor babies" by exploiting the "citizen child" perversion of the 14th Amendment.

Closing this loophole is the first priority when a patriotic immigration reform Adminstration is elected.

Interestingly, the H??rriyet article concludes:

The birthright citizenship [loophole] formerly applied to other countries such as the United Kingdom and Australia but both countries modified their law in the mid-1980s.

India maintained such birthright law until 2004, but ended the right to prevent continued illegal immigration from neighbors Pakistan and Bangladesh.

Print Friendly and PDF