The Borneo Post

Iraqis in US sue to prevent their deportatio­ns

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CHICAGO: Iraqi immigrants sued the US government Thursday to escape deportatio­n following raids last weekend in the Detroit area, saying they feared religious persecutio­n if sent home.

The raids targeted more than 100 people — mostly Chaldean Christians, but also Shiite Muslims and Christian converts, who are all religious minorities in Iraq, advocates said.

Most have lived in the US for decades and fear being targeted by extremists should they be sent back to Iraq.

US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t said the immigrants targeted in the weekend raids all had criminal records.

Seven of the detainees participat­ed in the class action lawsuit asking a federal court in Michigan to halt the deportatio­n process for all of those arrested.

“Not only is it immoral to send people to a country where they are likely to be violently persecuted, it expressly violates US and internatio­nal law and treaties,” said Kary Moss, head of the Michigan chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, which fi led the suit on the detainees’ behalf.

The weekend raids sent chills through the sizeable community of Chaldean Christians in the Detroit area, who comprised the majority of those arrested.

“We have seen a number of families who are completely shaken up, in particular kids who are missing a parent,” Nathan Kalasho, a Chaldean Christian who operates a charter school in the Detroit area, told AFP prior to the lawsuit being fi led.

The Christian population in Iraq has shrunk dramatical­ly, and Kalasho said Iraqi immigrants in Detroit do not believe the Middle Eastern country is safe for religious minorities.

“To send these folks back to a war zone is inhumane,” he said.

A felony conviction is grounds for deportatio­n in the US, but until a March deal between the two countries, Iraq had not had a policy of accepting its repatriate­d citizens from the US.

The ACLU countered in its court fi ling that many of the detainees had minor offenses, and committed no additional crimes after their conviction­s. — AFP

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