A dying child, a distant mother and the Trump travel ban that stood between them

The Trump administration on Tuesday granted a mother’s desperate appeal to be allowed into the United States to hold her dying infant son one last time.

Shaima Swileh required a travel waiver to make the sojourn from Cairo, Egypt, due to the President Donald Trump’s executive order barring travelers from seven mostly Muslim countries, including Yemen, where Swileh is from. The State Department granted the waiver the morning after the Sacramento Valley office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, or CAIR, drew national attention to the family’s plight during a press conference in the north Sacramento office building it shares with SN&R.

Swileh is expected to arrive in San Francisco Wednesday evening, a CAIR staff member said. Her 2-year-old son Abdullah is currently on life support at an Oakland hospital.

Abdullah’s father, Ali Hassan of Stockton, brought his son to the country a few months ago for treatment for a genetic brain condition. Both are U.S. citizens. Choked with emotion, Hassan said Monday that his wife had been prevented entry into the United States. Abdullah turned 2 just two days prior, he said.

“My wife’s calling me every day wanting to kiss and hold our son for the one last time,” Hassan told reporters. “Time is running out.”

According to CAIR-SV civil rights attorney Saad Sweilem, the chapter learned of the family’s dire situation from staff at the UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital, which is treating Abdullah. Sweilem linked the federal government’s treatment of Abdullah to the recent death of a 7-year-old girl from Guatemala in U.S. Border Patrol custody.

“American is in the middle of a fight,” he told reporters. “This administration is doing everything in its power to undermine immigrant rights and uphold a xenophobic agenda that tears families apart. As Americans, we need to decide. We decide what we want the rest of the world to think about when they think about America.”

For Hassan, who said in a statement that he was preparing to take Abdullah off life support before Tuesday’s development, it was a window into the old America.

Our content is free, but not free to produce

If you value our local news, arts and entertainment coverage, become an SN&R supporter with a one-time or recurring donation. Help us keep our reporters at work, bringing you the stories that need to be told.

Newsletter

Stay Updated

For the latest local news, arts and entertainment, sign up for our newsletter.
We'll tell you the story behind the story.