Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian-American Doctor Couple Pankaj Satija And Monika Ummat Facing Deportation Gets Reprieve

Darpan News Desk IANS, 31 Mar, 2017 12:05 PM
    Two prominent Indian-American doctors in Houston facing deportation as their travel documents had expired have been given a rare last minute-reprieve by the US administration that granted them a 90-day extension on humanitarian grounds.
     
    Dr Pankaj Satija and his wife Dr Monika Ummat, both neurologists, have been working legally in the US for 15 years. They have a 7-year-old son and 4-year-old daughter.
     
    The problem started when they visited India to see Dr Satija's sick father in October last year. On their return they were stopped at the Bush International airport by Customs and Border Protection officials because their travel documents had expired, the Houston Chronicle reported.
     
    The Customs and Border Protection officials stamped their travel document saying that it would expire in June this year, when in fact the US Citizenship and Immigration Services noted that their document actually expired in June, 2016.
     
    Upon returning to the US about a week later, a Customs and Border Protection official at the airport noted the discrepancy. The officials, however, allowed them to enter temporarily to correct the error.
     
    On Wednesday, Dr Satija and his wife were abruptly told by immigration officials that they had 24 hours to leave the US. They were told that under a new policy, they could no longer extend their temporary permission to stay while they waited for permanent authorisation, local media reported.
     
    However, as they were about to board a plane for India yesterday, they were granted a 90-day extension on humanitarian grounds.
     
    The couple had called on their legislators and had taken the media along with their attorneys to plead their case. They reported, as ordered, to customs officials at Bush Intercontinental Airport, where they were told the agency had suddenly reversed course.
     
    "Somebody at a higher level has made that decision," they were told by an agent. "I understand that you are physicians and a lot of lives are at stake."
     
    The agency offered the couple three months of humanitarian parole, a rare measure allowing immigrants, who are otherwise not permitted to enter the US, the opportunity to do so due to a "compelling emergency" to sort out their paperwork.
     
    "It was an unusual act of grace from an administration that has so far seemed intent on removing as many immigrants as it can, making few exceptions, even for those, like the Satijas, with good reasons to stay," the Houston Chronicle said in its report.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Hillary Clinton's New Book To Include 2016 US Election Experience

    Hillary Clinton's New Book To Include 2016 US Election Experience
      "These are the words I live by," said Ms Clinton, who will use them to tell stories from her life, up to and including her experiences in the 2016 presidential campaign.

    Hillary Clinton's New Book To Include 2016 US Election Experience

    Indian-American Leaders Launch Effort Against President Trump's Immigration Ban

    The lawmakers - Pramila Jayapal and Raja Krishnamoorthi - joined by former Obama Administration official and top Indian-American leaders urged the community to stand united and fight jointly against these executive orders.

    Indian-American Leaders Launch Effort Against President Trump's Immigration Ban

    Sri Lankan Man Arrested For Predicting President Maithripala Sirisena's Death

    Sri Lankan Man Arrested For Predicting President Maithripala Sirisena's Death
    A former Sri Lankan sailor, who had attacked the then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi with a rifle butt in Colombo in 1987, has been arrested for "predicting" the death of President Maithripala Sirisena.

    Sri Lankan Man Arrested For Predicting President Maithripala Sirisena's Death

    Quebec City's Outspoken Talk-Radio Hosts Face Backlash After Mosque Shooting

    Quebec City's Outspoken Talk-Radio Hosts Face Backlash After Mosque Shooting
    MONTREAL — In the soul-searching that has followed Sunday's deadly mass shooting at a Quebec City mosque, the city's controversial talk-radio hosts are facing a backlash for allegedly fanning the flames of Islamophobia and intolerance. 

    Quebec City's Outspoken Talk-Radio Hosts Face Backlash After Mosque Shooting

    Trump Impact? China Tests Missile With 10 Nuclear Warheads: Report

    Trump Impact? China Tests Missile With 10 Nuclear Warheads: Report
    China Carried Out Flight Test Of The Df-5c Missile Last Month Using 10 Separate Nuclear Warheads

    Trump Impact? China Tests Missile With 10 Nuclear Warheads: Report

    Three Nova Scotia Fishermen Charged After Video Posted Showing Abuse Of Seal

    Three Nova Scotia Fishermen Charged After Video Posted Showing Abuse Of Seal
    YARMOUTH, N.S. — Three Nova Scotia fishermen face charges for the alleged mistreatment of a seal that was caught on video and posted to social media, says the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans.

    Three Nova Scotia Fishermen Charged After Video Posted Showing Abuse Of Seal