Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Deportatio­n reprieve hailed

U.S. delays decision on fate of undocument­ed immigrant from Honduras

- By Mike Clary Staff writer

A 49-year-old South Florida woman who is fighting cancer and the threat of deportatio­n to her native Honduras won a temporary reprieve Monday.

“I am happy, I am relieved,” said a tearful Reina Gomez as she greeted supporters and a gaggle of news media that waited for her outside the U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t office in Miramar.

While Gomez’s battle to stay in the U.S. is far from settled, advocates for immigrant rights said the delay in deciding her asylum petition comes at a time when undocument­ed immigrants are facing both increased raids at home and arrests during regular check-ins with ICE officials.

Among about two dozen supporters who watched Gomez walk into the ICE offices for her 9 a.m. appointmen­t were some who feared that she could be detained.

“I am happy, I am relieved.” Reina Gomez ,a domestic worker who has lived in South Florida for 15 years

“We are happy to see Reina come back to her community and to her job as a domestic worker where she contribute­s to the well-being and the economy of several families in South Florida,” Marcia Olivo, executive director of the Miami Workers Center, said in a statement. “We will keep fighting for Reina and for all immigrants. We need real immigratio­n reform that grants a path to citizenshi­p, not an unfair system that tricks people into reporting to authoritie­s in order to speed their deportatio­n and tear them apart from their families.”

Under a crackdown on undocument­ed immigrants announced by the Trump administra­tion, arrests of people in the U.S. illegally increased 38 percent in the first four months of 2017 compared with the number arrested during the same time the previous year, according to ICE figures.

Some of those arrests have been made during what advocates call “silent raids” in which immigrants summoned to ICE offices for interviews are taken into custody and deported.

Among the supporters on hand to cheer as Gomez emerged from the ICE offices was Maria Bilbao, an organizer for the group United We Dream. “This is an example of what our community can do to stop deportatio­ns,” she said. “Hiding is not an option. We have to stand up, organize and fight back.”

Ana Quiros, a lawyer with the Archdioces­e of Miami who represents Gomez, said ICE officials indicated a decision on Gomez’s asylum request would come in two weeks.

If turned down, Gomez could be deported in October.

Gomez, a domestic worker who has lived in South Florida for 15 years, said she has been diagnosed with a rare form of leukemia that could not be properly treated in Honduras because of a lack of medicines. She has compared being sent back to Central America to being given a death sentence.

Gomez said she fled violence and an abusive relationsh­ip in Honduras and since coming to the U.S has worked to become a productive resident.

Frank Corbishley, an Episcopal chaplain at St. Bede Chapel at University of Miami, said he got to know Gomez when she was involved in union activities at the university.

“She is a good person who has grown into a strong person,” said Corbishley. “I am here to show solidarity with her and lend moral support.”

 ?? SUSAN STOCKER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Reina Gomez, left, hugs Ingrid Vaca after Gomez left her check-in appointmen­t with the U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t field office in Miramar. Gomez said she has been diagnosed with a rare form of leukemia that cannot be properly treated in...
SUSAN STOCKER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Reina Gomez, left, hugs Ingrid Vaca after Gomez left her check-in appointmen­t with the U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t field office in Miramar. Gomez said she has been diagnosed with a rare form of leukemia that cannot be properly treated in...

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