The Star Malaysia

Sick toddler whose mother had to fight to visit from Yemen dies

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SAN FRANCISCO: A young boy whose mother had to fight for permission to visit him from Yemen as he lay gravely ill in a US hospital has died, a rights group said.

Two-year-old Abdullah Hassan, who held American citizenshi­p through his father, had been suffering from a rare genetic illness in its terminal phase.

He died on Friday at a children’s hospital in Oakland, California.

Despite her son’s grave condition, Shaima Swileh had been repeatedly turned down when applying for a visa because of the travel restrictio­ns ordered by President Donald Trump against six mostly Muslimmajo­rity countries, including Yemen.

The story drew widespread media attention, especially after Abdullah’s father Ali Hassan made an emotional plea before television cameras.

Ultimately, the US embassy in Cairo granted an exemption to Swileh, who arrived at her son’s side on Dec 19.

“We are heartbroke­n. We had to say goodbye to our baby, the light of our lives,” Ali Hassan said in a statement issued by the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).

The boy’s funeral was planned for Saturday afternoon in Lodi, California.

“With their courage, this family has inspired our nation to confront the realities of Donald Trump’s Muslim ban,” said CAIR attorney Saad Sweilem, who helped the family negotiate the US bureaucrac­y.

“Abdullah has been a guiding light for all of us in the fight against xenophobia and family separation.”

The Republican president made the fight against illegal immigratio­n a central plank of his election campaign and a priority once he reached the White House.

Within a week of taking office, he shocked the world with his first travel ban, which critics say was clearly anti-Muslim, even as Trump insisted that it was meant to keep out terrorists.

His executive order was the subject of a long judicial battle before finally being upheld – in a revised version – by the Supreme Court.

The order closes American borders to some 150 million nationals from Iran, Libya, North Korea, Somalia, Syria and Yemen, as well as some government officials from Venezuela.

 ??  ?? A parent’s pain: Ali kissing his son Abdullah at a children’s hospital in Oakland, California in this file picture. — AP
A parent’s pain: Ali kissing his son Abdullah at a children’s hospital in Oakland, California in this file picture. — AP

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