Palestinian Protest Leader Detained by US Misses Son’s Birth

Tue Apr 22 2025
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Key points

  • The legal US resident is in ICE custody since last month
  • Immigration authorities arrested him on March 8
  • He was ordered to be deported

ISLAMABAD: Detained Columbia University alumnus Mahmoud Khalil missed the birth of his son on Monday while he remained detained by immigration authorities, his wife said Monday.

The legal US resident, who has been in the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) since last month, was denied temporary release to meet his newborn, said his wife, Noor Abdalla.

A graduate student at New York’s Columbia University who was one of the most visible leaders of nationwide campus protests against Israel’s war in Gaza, Khalil was arrested by immigration authorities on March 8.

He was ordered deported even though he was a permanent US resident through his American citizen wife, Noor Abdalla.

The arrest of Khalil, a leader in Columbia’s pro-Palestinian protests over the Israel-Hamas war and a US green card holder from Syria, has sparked outcry across the US, according to Axios.

Abdalla said that US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) denied a request to release Khalil temporarily for the birth of their child.

“This was a purposeful decision by ICE to make me, Mahmoud and our son suffer,” she said in a statement.

“Moments stolen”

“My son and I should not be navigating his first days on earth without Mahmoud. ICE and the Trump administration have stolen these precious moments from our family in an attempt to silence Mahmoud’s support for Palestinian freedom,” she said.

She gave birth in New York. Khalil was transferred to the southern state of Louisiana in an apparent bid to find a judge sympathetic to President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

Trump’s advisors have accused pro-Palestinian protesters of promoting anti-Semitism and terrorism, charges the activists deny.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio has invoked a law approved during the 1950s Red Scare that allows the United States to remove foreigners seen as adverse to US foreign policy.

Rubio argues that US constitutional protections of free speech do not apply to foreigners and that he alone can make decisions without judicial review.

Visas revoked

Hundreds of students have seen their visas revoked, with some saying they were targeted for everything from writing opinion articles to minor arrest records, AFP reported.

Immigration authorities last week arrested another Columbia University student active in the protests, Mohsen Mahdawi, as he attended an interview seeking to become a US citizen.

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