| Rachel | I'll put him on <a href=" http://www.aufildujeu.com/buy-copegus-online ">purchase ribavirin online</a> Now, after nine years of subsisting on rationed corn mush and lentils and living largely ungoverned by adults, the Lost Boys of Sudan were coming to America. In 1999, having determined that repatriation was not an option, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, working together with the State Department, recommended roughly 3,600 of them for resettlement in the United States. About 500 of the Lost Boys still under the age of 18 will immigrate to the U.S. by the end of this year, becoming the largest resettled group of unaccompanied refugee children in history. With federal funds and the help of social service agencies -- primarily Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services and the United States Catholic Conference -- they will be placed in foster homes and apartments in cities across the country. Most are expected to start school within a month of their arrival -- at a grade level commensurate with their ages, thanks to the rigorous English schooling that most boys received at Kakuma. The remaining 3,100 or so Lost Boys will be resettled as adults by the Office of Refugee Resettlement in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, initially living on federal cash assistance. After five years, each boy will be eligible for citizenship, provided he has turned 21. |
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