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  1. #1
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    ICE arrests 100 Cambodians with deportation orders

    ICE arrests Cambodians with deportation orders

    by Leslie Berestein Rojas
    October 26, 05:00 AM


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    FILE: A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent makes an arrest in Los Angeles. ICE officials said recent reported arrests of Cambodian immigrants in California and elsewhere are part of an ongoing effort by the U.S. to repatriate Cambodian nationals with deportation orders.U.S. IMMIGRATION AND CUSTOMS ENFORCEMENT

    Immigration officials have been arresting Cambodian nationals in California in recent weeks as the Trump administration moves to send back those with deportation orders.

    As many as 100 Cambodians nationwide may have been detained, according to community advocates, some in the Long Beach area where the immigrants have settled as part of a tight community and busy business district.


    Last Friday, Posda Tuot said he took his cousin, Nak Kim Chhouen, to his scheduled check-in with immigration officials. Chhouen, known by friends and family as Rickie, had been attending the appointments for years but this time, things were different.


    "I dropped him off at the federal building Friday morning, and he just never walked out,” Tuot said.


    Chhouen, a 42-year-old refugee who lives in Long Beach, was detained by immigration officials. Now he's in a local detention center awaiting deportation.


    Immigration officials said Chhouen was ordered deported in 2001 after a criminal conviction, which officials only described as an "aggravated felony, among other convictions, in 1999." He remained in the U.S. on supervised release, which allowed him to live and work here legally so long as he checked in.


    Officials said Chhouen's arrest is part of an ongoing effort to repatriate Cambodian nationals with deportation orders. Last month, the Trump administration imposed visa sanctions on Cambodia and three other countries for not accepting deportees.


    “The United States continues to work with the Government of Cambodia to establish a reliable processes for the issuance of travel documents and their acceptance of the prompt, lawful return of Cambodian nationals who are subject to removal from the United States," ICE spokeswoman Lauren Mack said in an email.


    According to his family, Chhouen arrived in the United States when he was a child, and is unfamiliar with Cambodia.


    ICE would not confirm how many Cambodians have been arrested in recent weeks, but community groups say there are many.


    “There has been a lot of fear in the community because there have been so many people rounded up, over a hundred," said Katrina Dizon, immigration policy manager with the Southeast Asia Resource Action Center, an advocacy group with offices in Sacramento and Washington, D.C.


    Dizon said her group has fielded calls over a couple of weeks about Cambodian immigrants arrested nationwide, mostly in California.


    "I have folks from Fresno, Monterey Park, Anaheim, Stockton, Orange, Long Beach, Oakland," Dizon said.


    Davisna Oum with United Cambodian Community of Long Beach, a community group in the city's Cambodia Town neighborhood, said his group has also received calls from family members about arrests of relatives over the past two weeks.


    In a letter this week, Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn urged U.S. Department of Homeland Security officials to not use the arrested immigrants as "bargaining chips" in negotiations with the Cambodian government.


    Cambodia has long been considered among so-called "recalcitrant" nations that do not fully cooperate with U.S. officials in accepting back deported nationals. While Cambodians have been deported over the years, U.S. officials have had problems getting that country's officials to issue travel documents, which are needed to repatriate deportees.


    In September, the Trump administration announced visa sanctions against Cambodia, Eritra, Guinea, and Sierra Leone "due to lack of cooperation in accepting their nationals ordered removed from the United States." Temporary visitor visas for traveling Cambodians were discontinued as a result.


    ICE spokeswoman Mack said the U.S. has more than 500 travel document requests pending with the Cambodian government, some dating back nearly a decade. She said there are more than 1,900 Cambodian nationals in the U.S. who have final deportation orders, and that the majority of these have criminal convictions.


    Tuot said that his cousin, Chhouen, served his time many years ago but has led a stable life since then, working for a telephone company and staying out of trouble.


    "He's been a changed man since he came out, trying to stay positive, trying to keep his life on track," according to Tuot.


    Tuot, who lives in Philadelphia, was visiting his cousinin Long Beach last week when Chhouen was detained. He said the family has hired an attorney in hopes of keeping Chhouen in the country.

    https://www.scpr.org/news/2017/10/26...-us-pushes-to/

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    GOODBYE!!!

    GO GET "FAMILIAR" WITH YOUR OWN COUNTRY...NO REASON TO STAY!!!

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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    10/26/2017 06:43 pm ET
    More Than 100 Cambodian-Americans Rounded Up, Now May Face Deportation

    “In the vast majority of cases, we are talking about people who came to the United States as children fleeing genocide with their families.”

    By Kimberly Yam

    BESTGREENSCREEN VIA GETTY IMAGES

    Dozens of Cambodian-Americans who have established their lives in the U.S. may be forced to leave a nation they consider home.

    More than 100 Cambodian-Americans have been detained across the country within the past month and could be facing deportation, according to a recent statement from the Southeast Asia Resource Action Center, or SEARAC. The organization says most of the individuals being detained are refugees, and many have green cards.

    The incident is likely a response to the Cambodian government’s pushback on the U.S. deporting Cambodian refugees here who have few or no ties to their home country, experts say.

    “With over 100 people rounded up this month, we’ve never seen anything like this,” Quyen Dinh, executive director of SEARAC, told HuffPost.

    Mari Quenemoen, SEARAC’s director of communications and development, explained to HuffPost that most of those affected by the round-ups have had contact with the criminal justice system and had received final orders of removal in the past because of their records. So the majority havebeen under orders of supervision and have been regularly checking in with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement for some time. When many of these individuals went in for their regular check-ins in the past few weeks, they were unexpectedly detained. Dinh said that in most cases, their past crimes aren’t relevant to their lives today.

    “In the vast majority of cases, we are talking about people who came to the United States as children fleeing genocide with their families. These are individuals whose crimes were often equated with poverty and youth,” Dinh told HuffPost. “Many were released years or decades ago and found a new path forward, whether in a career, education, family, or faith. ... To use their past served criminal sentences to justify punishing them again is inhumane and unjust.”

    ICE didn’t provide HuffPost with specifics about the situation, but the agency said Cambodia will have to cooperate with any deportations.

    “International law obligates each country to accept the return of its nationals ordered removed from the United States,” Brendan Raedy, a spokesperson for ICE, wrote in a statement to HuffPost. “The United States continues to work with the Government of Cambodia to establish a reliable processes for the issuance of travel documents and their acceptance of the prompt, lawful return of Cambodian nationals who are subject to removal from the United States.”

    SEARAC has been spearheading an online campaign to support the families of those who have been detained. Other leaders have been vocal against the detentions, including Janice Hahn, a Los Angeles County supervisor. Hahn wrote a letter to Elaine C. Duke, acting United States secretary of homeland security, expressing concern that the detentions were a result of tensions between the U.S. and Cambodia, and calling on the release of those detained.

    “These detentions are troubling. In fact, at least one of the detainees lives in my Distract and was swept up in the increased enforcement,” she wrote in the letter. “My residents and their families cannot be used as pawns.”


    The majority of those rounded up are being held at Adelanto Detention Facility in California, with more from North Carolina, Virginia, Wisconsin and other states being transferred there, according to Quenemon. Quenemon said SEARAC has received word the group will likely end up at an ICE facility in Indiana, where the Cambodian consulate will meet and interview them. She added that a number of them probably will then be deported, though it isn’t clear how many.


    Dinh told HuffPost the round-up is one of the largest her nonprofit has ever witnessed and is not random. She pointed out that Cambodia began accepting deportees following a 2002 repatriation agreement with the U.S., taking in a limited number. But as protests over the deportations arose from the Cambodian-American community, the Cambodian government temporarily suspended repatriations. As a response, the Trump administration imposed visa sanctions on the country, preventing high-ranking officials and their families from traveling to the United States.

    To demonstrate cooperation, Cambodia then announced it planned to look into accepting a limited number of repatriations. It expressed intent to interview 26 people facing deportation, a press release from the government explained. But the Trump administration continued with the large-scale roundup anyway, “presumably with the hope that they will pressure Cambodia to take more over the coming year,” Dinh said.

    Experts say that under the Trump administration, the Department of Homeland Security is expected to make harsher decisions regarding immigrants with criminal convictions. Trump has already rescinded a 2014 Obama-era memorandum that prioritized deporting those with criminal records but was more forgiving toward those who had shown progress and rehabilitation.

    For deportees, a life away from the U.S. could present a host of other challenges. While some find a way to successfully start anew in Cambodian society, others battle depression, a 2010 report on returnees notes. Some turn to drugs and alcohol to cope with the difficulty of their new lives, and a number of returnees have killed themselves.

    Dinh says it’s crucial to stand up for the Cambodian-American community during this time and speak out against the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, which expanded the categories of criminal convictions that would make deportation mandatory for both green card holders and refugees.

    Her organization is pushing people to contact their representatives to stop future deportations of these refugees from occurring.

    Dinh says that after all, these families who escaped a violent regime decades ago deserve happy lives.

    “They are fathers and mothers, business owners and valued employees. They support elderly parents still suffering from the physical and emotional scars of a brutal genocide,” she said. “If we really care about community safety and justice, we would invest in their communities and families, not tear them apart.”

    https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry...b0d0e4fe6c97fd

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  4. #4
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    GET THE WHOLE FAMILY OUT OF HERE!! PRONTO!! HURRY UP!!!
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