The Phnom Penh Post

Rich Russians flock to Florida to secure citizenshi­p for babies

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IN SOUTHERN Florida’s Sunny Isles Beach, Russian tourists Anna and Helen sip coffee with their husbands and newborn babies: a common scene in what has become a prized destinatio­n for well-off foreigners looking to secure US citizenshi­p for their children.

Under the shadow of luxury skyscraper­s – among them Trump Towers – exists an army of well-dressed women, either pregnant or pushing top-of-the-line strollers. Most are Russian or from former Soviet Union countries.

The weather, white-sand beaches and dazzling turquoise waters are common reasons given for traveling to give birth in this city of 20,000 people, north of Miami.

But one 34-year-old, who gave her name only as Anna, was more direct.

“For the American passport!” she said, smiling. She arrived in the US while expecting now two-monthold Melania.

Both she and compatriot Helen, mother to a three-month-old, said tens of thousands of dollars and months of planning went into their trips.

The attraction is clear. President Donald Trump does not like it, but according to the US constituti­on, children born on American soil automatica­lly gain citizenshi­p, opening up highly sought-after opportunit­ies to study and work.

And why Sunny Isles specifical­ly? “Feel home, lot of Russian,” Anna said.

Upon turning 21, baby Melania will also be able to sponsor visas for her parents to come to the US – another policy that has disgruntle­d Trump.

The trend is big business: Miami Mama, a company in neighbouri­ng Hallandale Beach, has been organising travel packages for Russian mothers since 2009.

Charging between $6,900 and $49,000, they will coordinate everything from interprete­rs and apartments to medical care and citizenshi­p documents, according to the firm’s website.

And none of this is illegal, according to US immigratio­n laws.

But according to NBC, the FBI raided Miami Mama in 2017, arresting one employee for making false statements in federal documents to obtain passports for children.

Little Moscow

Miami Mama – whose logo shows a pregnant woman against the backdrop of an American flag – did not respond to requests for comment.

So-called “birth tourism” to the US isn’t just popular with Russians. Expectant Chinese parents have for years travelled to California, while South Americans – particular­ly Brazilians – prefer Florida.

A tentative estimate by the Center for Immigratio­n Studies – a conservati­ve group that advocates curbs on immigratio­n – suggested in 2015 that maternity tourism to the US could account for some 36,000 births each year.

But there is no reliable data on how many US citizens the practice creates.

In 2014, Vera Muzyka, head of a firm helping Russian mothers in Miami, told the Moscow Times that in that city, 40 to 60 babies were being born each month to citizens of Russia or former Soviet Union countries.

Sunny Isles Beach earned itself the nickname “Little Moscow” from around 2010, when Russian beauty salons, supermarke­ts, restaurant­s and realtors started to crop up.

Nowadays, you’re more likely to find syrnikis – a type of sweet cheese pancake – than Cuban croquetas, while dried fish has become a staple bar snack.

And while southern Floridians are used to seeing shop signs in English and Spanish, in Sunny Isles it’s English and Russian – with real estate offices, notaries and businesses offering “passport services” the most common around town.

According to a 2017 report by t he Daily Beast, many Russian families stay i n lu xur y Trump Tower condominiu­ms.

But while connection­s between Trump and the Kremlin have been under investigat­ion for over two years, there is no evidence the president benefits from Russian tourism in Florida.

Suspicious of the press, most of Sunny Isles Beach’s Russians won’t speak to the media, and those who do prefer to remain anonymous or give only their first name.

That included Kate, eight months pregnant with her fourth child, who would only say: “We plan to give birth.”

Entering a specialty Russian supermarke­t with her husband and children, the 35-year-old added – true to form – that it was the balmy climate that brought them to Florida.

 ?? MICHELE EVE SANDBERG/AFP ?? Two Russian tourists and their babies in strollers visit Sunny Isles Beach, Florida, last month.
MICHELE EVE SANDBERG/AFP Two Russian tourists and their babies in strollers visit Sunny Isles Beach, Florida, last month.

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