Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Madagascar president warns of attempt to ‘seize power’: What to know
  • Mali imposes retaliatory visa bond fees on US travellers
  • Palestinians in Gaza need access to “nutritional food”
  • Why hasn’t New Zealand recognised Palestine?
  • Taliban and Pakistani forces exchange heavy fire across Afghanistan border
  • Week in Pictures: From ceasefire in Gaza to floods in Mexico
  • Crowd boos mention of Netanyahu during Witkoff’s speech in Tel Aviv
  • Madagascar president alleges coup attempt as soldiers support protesters
  • Bangladesh rolls out typhoid immunisation drive for 50 million children
  • Estimated cost to rebuild Gaza not “sufficient”
  • Madagascar soldiers join protesters amid coup allegation
  • Pakistani, Afghan forces exchange deadly border fire: What’s next?
  • China slams Trump’s 100 percent tariff threat, defends rare earth curbs
  • Why is Trump deploying forces to US cities?
  • Aftermath of RSF drone attack which killed dozens in Sudan’s el-Fasher
  • Cameroon votes in presidential election as Paul Biya, 92, seeks eighth term
  • LIVE: Afghanistan’s Taliban, Pakistan claim inflicting losses in fighting
  • Police disperse pro-Palestinian protest at Israel vs Norway football match
  • Madagascar army unit claims control as president alleges power-grab
  • LIVE: India vs Australia – Women’s Cricket World Cup 2025
  • Philippines accuses China of ramming, damaging vessel in South China Sea
  • Haaland scores three as Norway crush Israel amid pro-Palestinian protest
  • LIVE: Israel-Hamas truce holds, Palestinians return to Gaza ruins
  • Three Qatari officials killed in car crash in Egypt’s Sharm el-Sheikh
  • Lionel Messi scores two goals, assists as Inter Miami defeat Atlanta United

Torn families of Cambodian refugees deported from US

By Al Jazeera Published 2016-06-26 05:01 Updated 2016-06-26 05:06 Source: Al Jazeera

On a cold winter’s day before Christmas, on December 2, 1984, Sokhoeurn and her two sons set foot in the United States for the first time, after fleeing their birthplace of Cambodia from civil war and genocide – arriving as refugees in a foreign land they would come to know as home.

Cambodia was ravished by the war and the Communist Khmer Rouge regime, which tortured, starved and worked to death 1.7 million people – one-quarter of Cambodia’s population. Over 100,000 Cambodian refugees were resettled in the United States after the war.

But, according to the Returnee Integration Support Center (RISC), a non-governmental organisation working with Cambodian deportees, on average, eight Cambodian Americans are now deported back to Cambodia every month. Since the US Congress passed the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) and the 1996 Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act, RISC says that over 500 Cambodians have been deported back to a land of which they have little to no memory.

The retroactive laws, allowed noncitizens to be deported for committing certain crimes even if they were committed before the passage of the law.

With the authority of these laws, Sokhoeurn’s eldest son, Hov Ly Kol was deported to Cambodia in 2010, at the age of 36, for gang-related crimes he had committed as a teenager in 1996, and for which he had paid his dues to society in a 12-year jail sentence. 

When Kol left jail, he became a prominent community member, but he was torn from this community and his family when the authorities carried out his deportation order.

In Cambodia, Kol met Elizabeth Beach, originally from Texas, and they fell in love. The two married and had a child, Kathleen, but as Kol can never return to live in the US, the country where both he and Beach grew up, this new family unit is torn as well.

Kathleen is now three years old, and together with Elizabeth, they travel between the US, South Korea, and Cambodia, in order to be together with her dad.

Kol’s mother, 60-year-old Sokhoeurn, lives in southern Philadelphia and is left without her sons, as even her youngest son is serving a prison sentence. Sokhoeurn goes about her daily life, looking after her grandchildren, cooking traditional khmer food, and watching old DVDs of outdated Cambodian soap operas. 

RELATED: Cambodian refugees deported after decades in US