Mom-of-four seeks refuge in US church to avoid deportation

File picture: Carlos Osorio/AP

File picture: Carlos Osorio/AP

Published Jul 21, 2017

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New Haven - A single mother of four has taken refuge

in a Connecticut church after federal authorities ordered her

deported to her native Guatemala as part of President Donald

Trump's crackdown on unauthorized immigrants in the United

States.

Nury Chavarria, who moved to the United States in 1993 to

seek asylum from political turmoil and violence at home, was

supposed to board a plane to Guatemala on Thursday.

Instead the 43-year-old housekeeper took sanctuary at

Iglesia De Dios Pentecostal in New Haven, Connecticut. She is a

single mother of four children aged 9 to 21. All of her children

were born in the United States, automatically giving them

citizenship. Her eldest has cerebral palsy.

Her original asylum request was denied, and she has

technically been living illegally in the United States since

1999. Chavarria has been granted stays of removal on

humanitarian grounds as she has raised her children.

Connecticut Governor Dannel Malloy has expressed his support

for Chavarria and met with her inside the church on Thursday

evening. He told reporters that the state is "not able to do

much" for her given her fugitive status.

On Friday, he wrote in a tweet, "#NuryChavarria is a mother

and has no criminal record. She is welcome in our state."

Federal immigration agents have generally respected the

tradition of not crossing the threshold of houses of worship to

make arrests.

When Trump was elected in November, he vowed to deport 2

million to 3 million illegal immigrants. In the first few months

of his presidency, arrests have risen, but actual deportations

have fallen by 12 percent compared to the same period under

President Barack Obama.

"We have opened the doors of our congregation to serve Ms.

Chavarria as a sanctuary church," Pastor Héctor Otero of

Iglesisa De Dios Pentecostal told the media through a translator

on Thursday.

In April, Pastor Otero told the New Haven Register that his

congregants were committed to providing short-term sanctuary to

immigrants facing deportation, but that they may not have

capacity to support sanctuary seekers for an extended period of

time.

Chavarria has long been on the radar of immigration

officials. She was allowed to voluntarily depart when her case

was reviewed in 1998, according to Khaalid Walls, spokesperson

for the U.S. Immigration Customs Enforcement.

She was subject to final order of removal in 1999. After

years of stays, she was told to buy a plane ticket to Guatemala

at her last annual check-in with the ICE in June. 

Reuters

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