Social
media shook with emotion. Headlines shouted the news. Legal scholars debated
the order’s scope. But the most immediate effect of President Trump’s executive
order barring refugees from entering the United States and halting entry from
seven predominantly Muslim countries could be quantified on a human scale:
refugees and other immigrants from the seven countries, some on their way to
the United States on Friday when Mr. Trump signed the order, who were no longer able to enter
the United States.
Here
are some of their stories.
Hameed
Khalid Darweesh, Iraq
Mr.
Darweesh, a husband and father of three who worked for the United States
military in Iraq for about a decade, was detained after arriving at Kennedy Airport on
Friday night. He was granted a special immigrant visa on Jan. 20. When he filed
for it, he said he had been directly targeted because of his work for the U.S.
as an interpreter, engineer and contractor.
Although
Mr. Darweesh’s wife and children were allowed into the country, he was
initially detained. Mr. Darweesh was released on Saturday after lawyers filed a
writ of habeas
corpus in federal court seeking freedom for him, as well as for
another Iraqi who was detained at the airport.
With - now released - Iraqi Refugee blocked by Trump’s order at JFK. Working w/@NydiaVelazquez to help 11 more refugees still being held. pic.twitter.com/8HF7jmBdvQ— (((Rep. Nadler))) (@RepJerryNadler) January 28, 2017
Speaking to reporters and
some protesters who gathered outside Kennedy Airport, Mr. Darweesh called
America the greatest nation in the world and said he was thankful for the
people who had worked on his behalf. “This is the humanity, this is the soul of
America,” he said. “This is what pushed me to move, leave my country and come
here.”
Unnamed family of 6, Syria
The
family members have been living in a refugee camp in Turkey, and were scheduled
to fly to the United States on Monday, according US Together, a refugee
resettlement agency quoted in The Cleveland Plain Dealer. The
agency had found an apartment for them to rent with another family of Syrian
refugees in Cleveland.
Those
plans have been canceled in the aftermath of Mr. Trump’s order.
“It was going to be really
perfect,” Danielle Drake, a community relations manager for US Together, told
the newspaper. “I can’t even imagine how the family feels right now.”
Seyed Soheil Saeedi Saravi, Iran
Mr. Saravi, a young
scientist in Iran, had been scheduled to travel to Boston, where he was awarded
a fellowship at Harvard to study cardiovascular medicine, according to Thomas
Michel, the professor who was to supervise his research. Then the visas for Mr.
Saravi and his wife were suspended, Professor Michel said.
Haider Sameer Abdulkhaleq Alshawi, Iraq
Mr. Alshawi, who worked for
a United States contractor in Iraq, was detained after he landed at Kennedy
Airport on Friday. He had flown from Stockholm to New York, en route to Texas
to see his wife and son.
Ali Abdi, Iran
Mr. Abdi, an Iranian Ph.D.
student at Yale with permanent residency in the United States, was left in
limbo in Dubai after leaving the United States for Afghanistan on Jan. 22,
according to The Guardian.
In statement he posted on
his Facebook page that the publication quoted, Mr. Abdi said he had been headed
to Afghanistan for ethnographic research. The executive order, he wrote, “is
likely to prevent permanent residents like me from returning to the country
where I am a student, where I have to defend my thesis,” according to The
Guardian.
“Meanwhile, it’s not yet
clear whether the consulate of Afghanistan in Dubai would issue the visa I need
in order to stay in Kabul for a year,” he wrote, “and I cannot stay in Dubai
for long or my UAE visa would expire. It’s not wise to go to Iran either.”
Travelers, Cairo
Six travelers — five from
Iraq and one from Yemen — who were on their way to New York were prevented from
boarding a flight in Cairo on Saturday even though they had valid United States
visas, Reuters reported.
The Iraqi travelers began
their journey in Erbil, part of Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq, and were in
Cairo on a layover, Reuters said. The Yemeni traveler arrived at the airport
from elsewhere in the Egyptian capital.
All six were told they could not board EgyptAir flight 985 to
Kennedy Airport. The Iraqis were being detained at the airport in Cairo until
they could be returned to their country of origin, Reuters said. It had no
information on the status of the Yemeni traveler.
Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/28/us/us-immigration-ban.html