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Iranians Arrested in Deportation Drive 06/30 06:13
(AP) -- Mandonna "Donna" Kashanian lived in the United States for 47 years,
married a U.S. citizen and raised their daughter. She was gardening in the yard
of her New Orleans home when U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers
handcuffed and took her away, her family said.
Kashanian arrived in 1978 on a student visa and applied for asylum, fearing
retaliation for her father's support of the U.S.-backed shah. She lost her bid,
but she was allowied to remain with her husband and child if she checked in
regularly with immigration officials, her husband and daughter said. She
complied, once checking in from South Carolina during Hurricane Katrina. She is
now being held at an immigration detention center in Basile, Louisiana, while
her family tries to get information.
Other Iranians are also getting arrested by immigration authorities after
decades in the United States. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security won't
say how many people they've arrested, but U.S. military strikes on Iran have
fueled fears that there is more to come.
"Some level of vigilance, of course, makes sense, but what it seems like ICE
has done is basically give out an order to round up as many Iranians as you
can, whether or not they're linked to any threat and then arrest them and
deport them, which is very concerning," said Ryan Costello, policy director of
the National Iranian American Council, an advocacy group.
Homeland Security did not immediately reply to an email seeking comment on
Kashanian's case but have been touting arrests of Iranians. The department
announced the arrests of at least 11 Iranians on immigration violations during
the weekend of the U.S. missile strikes. U.S. Customs and Border Protection
said, without elaborating, that it arrested seven Iranians at a Los
Angeles-area address that "has been repeatedly used to harbor illegal entrants
linked to terrorism."
The department "has been full throttle on identifying and arresting known or
suspected terrorists and violent extremists that illegally entered this
country, came in through Biden's fraudulent parole programs or otherwise,"
spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said of the 11 arrests. She didn't offer any
evidence of terrorist or extremist ties. Her comment on parole programs
referred to President Joe Biden's expanded legal pathways to entry, which his
successor, Donald Trump, shut down.
Russell Milne, Kashanian's husband, said his wife is not a threat. Her
appeal for asylum was complicated because of "events in her early life," he
explained. A court found an earlier marriage of hers to be fraudulent.
But over four decades, Kashanian, 64, built a life in Louisiana. The couple
met when she was bartending as a student in the late 1980s. They married and
had a daughter. She volunteered with Habitat for Humanity, filmed Persian
cooking tutorials on YouTube and was a grandmother figure to the children next
door.
The fear of deportation always hung over the family, Milne said, but he said
his wife did everything that was being asked of her.
"She's meeting her obligations," Milne said. "She's retirement age. She's
not a threat. Who picks up a grandmother?"
While Iranians have been crossing the border illegally for years, especially
since 2021, they have faced little risk of being deported to their home
countries due to severed diplomatic relations with the U.S. That seems to no
longer be the case.
The Trump administration has deported hundreds of people, including
Iranians, to countries other than their own in an attempt to circumvent
diplomatic hurdles with governments that won't take their people back. During
Trump's second term, countries including El Salvador, Costa Rica and Panama
have taken back noncitizens from the U.S.
The administration has asked the Supreme Court to clear the way for several
deportations to South Sudan, a war-ravaged country with which it has no ties,
after the justices allowed deportations to countries other than those
noncitizens came from.
The U.S. Border Patrol arrested Iranians 1,700 times at the Mexican border
from October 2021 through November 2024, according to the most recent public
data available. The Homeland Security Department reported that about 600
Iranians overstayed visas as business or exchange visitors, tourists and
students in the 12-month period through September 2023, the most recent data
reports.
Iran was one of 12 countries subject to a U.S. travel ban that took effect
this month. Some fear ICE's growing deportation arrests will be another blow.
In Oregon, an Iranian man was detained by immigration agents this past week
while driving to the gym. He was picked up roughly two weeks before he was
scheduled for a check-in at ICE offices in Portland, according to court
documents filed by his attorney, Michael Purcell.
The man, identified in court filings as S.F., has lived in the U.S. for over
20 years, and his wife and two children are U.S. citizens.
S.F. applied for asylum in the U.S. in the early 2000s, but his application
was denied in 2002. His appeal failed but the government did not deport him and
he continued to live in the country for decades, according to court documents.
Due to "changed conditions" in Iran, S.F. would face "a vastly increased
danger of persecution" if he were to be deported, Purcell wrote in his
petition. "These circumstances relate to the recent bombing by the United
States of Iranian nuclear facilities, thus creating a de facto state of war
between the United States and Iran."
S.F.'s long residency in the U.S., his conversion to Christianity and the
fact that his wife and children are U.S. citizens "sharply increase the
possibility of his imprisonment in Iran, or torture or execution," he said.
Similarly, Kashanian's daughter said she is worried what will happen to her
mother.
"She tried to do everything right," Kaitlynn Milne said.
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