Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Yemeni mom wins travel ban waiver to see dying son in U.S.

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A Yemeni mother on Tuesday won her fight for a waiver from the Trump administra­tion’s travel ban that would allow her to go to California to see her dying 2-year-old son.

Shaima Swileh planned to fly to San Francisco on Wednesday after the State Department granted her a visa, said Basim Elkarra of the Council on AmericanIs­lamic Relations in Sacramento, Calif., whose lawyers sued this week.

The boy’s father, Ali Hassan, is a U.S. citizen who brought their son, Abdullah, to California in the fall to get treatment for a genetic brain condition after the boy’s health worsened.

Swileh and the boy had been living in Egypt and she had hoped to accompany them but was not given a visa to enter the United States. Citizens from Yemen and six other mostly Muslim countries are restricted from traveling to the United States under the travel ban enacted under President Donald Trump.

As Swileh and her husband fought for a waiver, their son’s health declined. Last week, doctors put him on life support.

Hassan was losing hope his wife would ever be allowed in the U.S. and was considerin­g pulling his son off life support to end his suffering, but then a social worker at the hospital reached out to the Council on American-Islamic Relations, Elkarra said.

State Department spokesman Robert Palladino called it “a very sad case, and our thoughts go out to this family at this time, at this trying time.”

He said that generally cases are handled individual­ly and U.S. officials try to facilitate legitimate travel to the U.S. while protecting national security.

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