Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Immigratio­n activists ‘can’t stay silent’

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LOS ANGELES — Every day, Victoria Martinez’s 2year-old son peppers her with questions about the disappeara­nce of his father, a Cambodian immigrant.

“Where is Daddy?” Shawn Ly asks his mom.

She doesn’t know how to answer. She sobs often.

Martinez’s partner, Sreang Ly, was detained by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t in early October. Ly, who had a prior conviction for illegal possession of guns, was one of more than 200 people of Cambodian and Vietnamese descent detained this fall as the Trump administra­tion stepped up efforts to deport immigrants with criminal records.

Most associate Trump’s rhetoric about deportatio­ns with Latinos, given his vows to build a border wall, his assertions that Mexican immigrants are “rapists” and drug dealers, and his decision to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program for immigrants brought to this country illegally as children, most of whom are Latino.

But immigratio­n activists say the roundups of people of Cambodian and Vietnamese descent are unpreceden­ted and have sparked anxiety in immigrant communitie­s.

“People may think it’s just Latinos being threatened when it comes to deportatio­ns. But there are all sorts of immigrants affected, and we can’t stay silent,” said Laboni Hoq, litigation director for the Los Angeles chapter of the PN civil rights organizati­on Asian Americans Advancing Justice.

“This is a political issue. The administra­tion is cracking down to deliver on campaign promises, and they are going community by community to make their actions known.”

The San Francisco and Los Angeles chapters of Asian Americans Advancing Justice, and the law firm Sidley Austin LLP, filed suit in October against the federal government, alleging the immigrants were illegally detained and should be released.

After the detainees learned the government would begin removal proceeding­s on Dec. 18, U.S. District Judge Cormac Carney issued a temporary restrainin­g order halting deportatio­ns to give the court time to consider the “complex issues” in the lawsuit.

Brendan Raedy, an ICE spokesman, said the agency does not comment on pending litigation.

Family members whose loved ones are sitting in detention feel an urgency to speak up about their concerns and try to dispel myths about Asian immigrants.

“Sometimes Asian communitie­s are ignored because we don’t think of Asians as getting deported,” said Posda Tuot, whose cousin, Kim Nak Chhoeun, was detained in October. “They’re the good ones, pursuing their own thing on the side. So when something bad comes up, we must lobby to create understand­ing for their situation.”

Sean Commons, a partner at Sidley Austin, said he hears “multiple stories of people changing their lives, becoming pillars of their communitie­s, and then suddenly they get picked up and they’re gone. Why? They should give people notice. These folks are not a danger or a flight risk.”

Cathee Khamvongsa of Modesto, Calif., said in October, ICE agents detained her 42-year-old husband, Mony Neth, who was convicted of possessing stolen guns when he was 20.

At the time he was arrested, Neth was active in church and did volunteer work, feeding the homeless, Khamvongsa said.

“Asians have to fight back loudly, not stay undergroun­d as we have done for many years,” she said.

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 ?? POSDA TUOT ?? Kim Nak Chhoeun, 42, came to the U.S. as a refugee when he was 6 years old. Chhoeun was detained in October.
POSDA TUOT Kim Nak Chhoeun, 42, came to the U.S. as a refugee when he was 6 years old. Chhoeun was detained in October.

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