Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander and Allied Organizations Urge Biden to Protect Southeast Asians and Halt Deportations

A halt to deportations would provide relief for over 15,000 SEAAs with removal orders and would reaffirm President-elect Biden’s commitment to racial justice.
For Immediate Release
Contact
Michelle Boykins (202) 296-2300, ext. 0144 mboykins@advancingjustice-aajc.org
Elaine Sanchez Wilson (202) 601-2970 elaine@searac.org
Phi Nguyen (770) 818-6147 pnguyen@advancingjustice-atlanta.org

Washington, D.C. — Today, the Southeast Asia Resource Action Center, Asian Americans Advancing Justice, the Southeast Asian Freedom Network, and the National Council of Asian Pacific Americans sent a letter, signed by 150 organizations, urging President-elect Biden to place a complete moratorium on all deportations immediately upon taking office until Congress can pass robust immigration reform that would repeal sections of the 1996 immigration policies responsible for the United States’ current draconian immigration enforcement system. 

A halt to deportations would provide relief for over 15,000 SEAAs with removal orders and would reaffirm President-elect Biden’s commitment to racial justice. The letter also recommended broad protections for Southeast Asian Americans including deprioritizing removals of people with old convictions, lifting visa sanctions on Laos and Cambodia, and requiring that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) use their discretionary powers to release all immigrants possible from detention. The letter is available here

Katrina Dizon Mariategue, Acting Executive Director, Southeast Asia Resource Action Center:

“Deportations of Southeast Asian Americans have inflicted irreparable harm against our families and our communities. For decades, immigrants and refugees have been criminalized, and families have been torn asunder after fleeing a lifetime of violence. President-elect Biden and Vice President-elect Harris must uphold their commitment to racial justice and dismantle the inhumane immigration laws that continue to terrorize our communities. We are hopeful that the incoming Administration will work with our movement and organizations to stop the further harm to Southeast Asian American refugees and repair the damage done to immigrant communities.” 

Ny Nourn, Community Advocate, Asian Americans Advancing Justice - Asian Law Caucus:

"I was born in a refugee camp in Thailand after my mother fled genocide in Cambodia. We were resettled from a life of poverty and violence in the camp to more of the same in the United States. As a young person stuck in an abusive relationship, I was given a life sentence and deportation instead of support. Thankfully, I am free and safe today because of my community. I've seen too many of my incarcerated and refugee family face deportation. The Biden Administration must end the violence being inflicted on Southeast Asian refugee communities." 

Phi Nguyen, Litigation Director,  Asian Americans Advancing Justice-Atlanta:

"Deportation is a type of violence that flows from America's web of carceral institutions that aggressively police, criminalize, and punish migrants and people of color. Joe Biden and Kamala Harris ran on a platform to build this country back better. Building America back better must include investment in life, dignity, and care. It must include a complete overhaul and reimagination of an immigration system that prioritizes punishment and perpetuates cycles of displacement. We look forward to working with the Biden Administration to ensure that it delivers on its promises to our immigrant communities."

Sarath S. Suong, National Director, Southeast Asian Freedom Network:

"Over forty five years ago, Southeast Asians resettled here because the United States military destabilized our home countries under the guise of protecting democracy. As we've seen from the past four years, the real threat to American democracy are white supremacist forces like the Trump administration and their followers, not Southeast Asians refugees living under constant threat of detention and deportation. An immigration system that closes borders and throws people into cages need to be abolished. We urge the incoming administration to join us in rebuilding a new system where refugees and immigrants are given the resources and support needed to thrive."