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WASHINGTON – After spending over five months in federal detention, Guan Heng, a Chinese citizen known for revealing human rights violations in China, has been freed. His detention was part of a large-scale immigration enforcement initiative under the Trump administration.
Following his release, Guan was joyfully reunited with his mother on Tuesday. This came nearly a week after an immigration judge granted him asylum, acknowledging the genuine threat of persecution he would face if he returned to China.
“I’m feeling fantastic,” shared 38-year-old Guan with The Associated Press on Wednesday. “Yesterday, the excitement hadn’t sunk in, as it still felt like I was imprisoned. But today, many friends have visited, making it feel real.”
Currently residing temporarily in Binghamton, New York, Guan mentioned that he hasn’t yet mapped out his long-term plans.
His mother, Luo Yun, traveled from Taiwan to the U.S. to support her son and expressed a sense of relief at his release.
“For five and a half months, I struggled to sleep peacefully, but today I finally feel at ease,” Luo remarked.
It was a rare successful outcome for an asylum seeker since President Donald Trump returned to office. At one point in detention, Guan was faced with deportation to Uganda, but the Department of Homeland Security dropped the plan in December after his plight raised public concerns and attracted attention on Capitol Hill. DHS, which has 30 days to appeal the immigration judge’s Jan. 28 ruling, did not immediately respond to a request to confirm if it has decided not to appeal.
Rep. Ro Khanna, the top Democrat on the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party, said Guan should not have had to spend months in detention for the right outcome to be reached.
“His release is a reminder that the rule of law and our moral duty to protect those who expose human rights abuses go hand in hand,” Khanna said, vowing to press for transparency in similar cases.
Guan in 2020 secretly filmed detention facilities in Xinjiang, adding to a body of evidence of what activists say are widespread rights abuses in the Chinese region, where as many as 1 million members of ethnic minorities, especially the Uyghurs, have been locked up.
The Chinese government has denied allegations of rights abuses in Xinjiang, saying it runs vocational training programs to help local residents learn employable skills while rooting out radical thoughts. Beijing has silenced dissenting views on its practices in Xinjiang through a range of coercive means.
The State Department, while declining to comment on Guan’s case because of confidentiality rules, said it condemns the Chinese ruling party’s “genocide, religious persecution, and crimes against humanity against Uyghurs and others in Xinjiang.”
During his asylum hearing last week, Guan said he didn’t set out to document the detention facilities Xinjiang so he could claim asylum in the United States. He said he sympathized with the persecuted Uyghurs and wanted to bear witness to their plight.
Guan knew he had to leave China if he wanted to publish the footage. He went first to Hong Kong and from there to Ecuador, where Chinese tourists could travel without a visa, and then to the Bahamas. He released most of his video footage on YouTube shortly before arriving in Florida by boat in October 2021.
Guan told the immigration judge he didn’t know whether he would survive the boat trip and wanted to make sure the footage would be seen.
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