--- On *Sat, 8/14/10, [email protected] <[email protected]>*wrote:


From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Cambodian Americans in Philly and Deportation Issues

Date: Saturday, August 14, 2010, 3:34 PM

Dear SEARAC Supporters,

We're sharing with you a news article in the Philadelphia Daily News and a
video report by the BBC that just came out regarding the Cambodian community
in Philly and deportation issues. Please feel free to share the information
widely.

Fighting Past Struggles with Positive Beats
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/world_news_america/8913686.stm

In Philadelphia, the band AZI Fellas is truly making their voice heard. The
group is composed of Cambodian migrants and their raps bring to life the
struggles of their community. Michael Maher has traveled to meet the
musicians and hear their message.

Crimes from his past come back to haunt native Cambodian
Posted:  08/13/2010 9:33 PM
http://www.philly.com/dailynews/local/20100813_Crimes_from_his_past_come_back_to_haunt_native_Cambodian.html

By JULIE SHAW
[email protected]<http://us.mc823.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]>215-854-2592

Ly Hov Khol was a young child when he and his family fled the "killing
fields" in Cambodia in the late 1970s, a period when 1 to 2 million people
died of starvation and disease or were brutally executed under the Khmer
Rouge dictatorship.

After spending time in refugee camps in Thailand and the Philippines, his
family was welcomed to the United States as refugees five years later, when
Khol was 10.

While in high school, Khol, who became a legal permanent resident, got
involved with a gang.

In January 1995, he acted as a lookout as another gang member entered a
house, shot a man dead, and fled with stolen goods. Khol got involved with
the gang in another robbery three days later.

Khol pleaded guilty to third-degree murder, robbery and conspiracy in the
first case, and to robbery and related offenses in the second.  He was
sentenced to eight to 26 years in prison.

After serving more than 12 years behind bars and getting paroled in June
2007, Khol, now 35, changed his life. Most recently, he's been volunteering
with kids, cleaning up his neighborhood South Philly park and taking care of
his mother and younger siblings.

But that's all at peril now.

Because of immigration laws passed in the United States, noncitizens who
commit certain crimes are automatically deportable back to their home
countries, and there's no hearing before an immigration judge.

Khol's ticking deportation time bomb sounded its alarm last Friday, when he
checked in with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement office, as
required.

ICE detained him, and he is now at the York County Detention Center,
awaiting deportation to Cambodia, which could come at the end of this month.

"I can't eat, I feeling no good," Khol's mother, Sokhoeurn Khol, 55, said
amid tears last night in her South Philadelphia home, shortly before
community members held a rally at a nearby park to petition for Khol's
release.

"We went through a lot," Khol's sister, Jeanette Khol, 20, said. She
realizes that people may not care for her brother, since he committed a
crime. But "people do deserve a second chance," she said, wiping tears from
her eyes.

"He did his crime, but he also did his time."

If Khol is deported, he would be returning to a country he hardly knows. He
doesn't know his relatives there. He can speak some Cambodian, but can't
write it. "If he goes there, it's like throwing him to a shark," said
Jeanette.

David Seng, a Cambodian-American who works at United Communities Southeast
Philadelphia, a nonprofit agency where Khol was volunteering and taking
job-training classes, said Khol wanted to teach youths to not make bad
decisions like he did and to stay in school. Seng said growing up here can
be hard on immigrant children and teens.

"A lot of them get involved in gangs for protection," he said. "They get
picked on in school just because they're different . . . We don't have a lot
of role models."

Khol's father wasn't in his life. Jeanette said that her brother, tall but
skinny, was picked on at Furness High School.

At last night's rally at 6th and Ritner streets, about 175 people showed up
- many Cambodian, including three Buddhist monks.

Mia-lia Kiernan, of the Cambodian Association of Greater Philadelphia, told
the crowd: "What happened to Ly, this is happening all over the East Coast
now." Six people were just detained by ICE in Lowell, Mass., she said.

Since the United States and Cambodia signed a treaty in 2002, allowing
Cambodians to be deported back to their home country, ICE was "deporting a
lot of people from the West Coast," she said. "Now, they're coming over to
the East Coast."

http://m.philly.com/phillycom/db_/contentdetail.htm;jsessionid=2C77A0409B2EA51453F83F708672C644?contentguid=2HFeMIwN&full=true#display

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group.
This is an unmoderated forum. Please refrain from using foul language. 
Thank you for your understanding. Peace among us and in Cambodia.

To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/camdisc
Learn more - http://www.cambodia.org

Reply via email to