📡Guardians of Hong Kong
9.57K subscribers
21.6K photos
1.88K videos
27 files
9.99K links
We provide translation of news in English from local media and other sources, for academic use.
Facebook: http://bit.ly/BeWaterHongKong
Instagram: @guardiansofhk
Website: https://guardiansofhk.com/
Download Telegram
#HKRefugee #Youth #US
#PoliticalAsylum #HumanitarianCrisis #PoliticalOppression
A Long and Uncertain Road Awaits a 17-Year-Old Hong Kong Student Seeking Political Asylum in the U.S.
 
Source:  Apple Daily  #Aug11
 
Read more
⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️
https://t.me/guardiansofhongkong/24372
#HKRefugee #Youth #US
A Long and Uncertain Road Awaits a 17-Year-Old Hong Kong Student Seeking Political Asylum in the U.S.
 
Nearly 10,000 protesters have been arrested in Hong Kong since the beginning of the anti-extradition law amendment bill (anti-ELAB) movement last year.  Some protesters are staying in Hong Kong to continue their fight for justice despite having been arrested before, while others have gone into exile for fear of persecution.  Ah-Y (pseudonym), a 17-year-old DSE candidate, is among those who have fled.  As the U.S. government intends to tighten the eligibility of refugees and asylum seekers, as well as extending the processing time for granting work permits, applicants such as Ah-Y are subjected to a lengthy and uncertain waiting process.
 
The U.S. grants residency to 18,000 eligible asylum applicants each year, of which only about 30% of political asylum applicants end up receiving stay permits.  According to the statistics of the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (#USCIS), a total of 5 Hong Kong residents have applied for political asylum since 2015, but the number of applicants is expected to increase now that the Hong Kong National Security Law has come into effect.
 
Currently in California, the 17-year-old DSE candidate Ah-Y was arrested in one of the anti-ELAB protests.  She was kept in custody for the maximum hours and after her release without bail, she chose to leave Hong Kong at the end of May.  She used a travel visa to enter California and applied for political asylum with the help of an organization formed by Hongkongers living in the U.S.
 
Because the COVID-19 spread is yet to be under control in California, Ah-Y seldom goes out.  Her parents are worried about her situation since she is living alone in a foreign country.  But to her, the most insufferable thing is to keep hearing news of her friends' arrests.  "I can't eat or sleep well, and I’m extremely worried for their safety.  When my friends go and take part in the protests, I won’t be able to relax until I know that they’re back home safe and sound," said Ah-Y.
 
Source:  Apple Daily  #Aug11
 
https://hk.appledaily.com/us/20200811/7U7SMIVUHRBKJAKV4XS4YG7TYY/ 

#PoliticalAsylum #HumanitarianCrisis #PoliticalOppression