From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Arellano Arrest, Deportation Hurts Immigrant Families


From "Jenny Shields" <JShields@afsc.org>
Date Mon, 20 Aug 2007 14:51:05 -0400

AFSC: "U.S. POLICY SHOULD KEEP FAMILIES TOGETHER, NOT SEPARATE MOTHERS

FROM

THEIR CHILDREN"

For More Information, contact: Janis D. Shields, Director Media and Public Relations, (215) 241-7060; AFTER HOURS (302) 545-6596 or Esther Nieves, Director of Immigrant and Refugee Rights, (215) 241- 7131, (215) 939-0676 (cell)

Philadelphia [August 19] - In the wake of the arrest and deportation of Elvira Arellano - a Mexican immigrant who, with her 8-year old son, sought church sanctuary - the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) continues its call for a rational, humane, and fair system of immigration that provides a path to legal residency and citizenship and keeps families in this country intact.

"Elvira exemplifies what's wrong with current immigration laws," says Christian Ramirez, national immigrants' rights coordinator for the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker social justice organization. "Ripping a mother away from her 8-year old child is unconscionable. Such dramatic and drastic measures fail to address the root causes of migration to the United States and ignore the needs of multi-status immigrant families, specifically families with children born in the United States who have known no other life beyond the one they have had in this country."

Ramirez saw Elvira Arellano this morning, after she was deported to Mexico. He reports that she vowed to be reunited with her son and to continue campaigning for just and humane treatment of immigrants.

"With her strength, passion and admirable response, Elvira demonstrates these inhumane actions will not take away her dignity," Ramirez adds. "However, the repressive worksite raids and harsh, punitive enforcement tactics now adopted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement only compel thousands of families - such as Arellano and her son - to live their lives underground in a complicated and traumatic immigration limbo."

The Service Committee is compelled to speak out at this critical moment when many mixed-status families, such as Elvira Arellano and her U.S.-born son, have nearly lost all hope of remaining together.

As an undocumented immigrant mother facing deportation for the past year, Elvira Arellano had been given sanctuary by one of Chicago's Methodist congregations. She had traveled to Los Angeles with community and faith leaders from Chicago as part of a nationwide advocacy campaign calling for humane immigration policies and an end to immigration raids in worksites and homes across the country.

The deportation occurs at a moment of great anxiety in immigrant communities. Last week, the Department of Homeland Security issued new immigration enforcement rules that, among other initiatives, increase the number of border agents, detention facilities, and workplace immigration raids.

Instead of giving free rein to repressive worksite raids and other, this country needs constructive immigration policies that enable Elvira Arellano and other undocumented parents to remain with their children and find a path to legal residency and citizenship.

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The American Friends Service Committee is a Quaker organization that includes people of various faiths who are committed to social justice, peace and humanitarian service. Its work is based on the belief in the worth of every person and faith in the power of love to overcome violence and injustice.


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