WASHINGTON — Guan Heng, a Chinese national who exposed human rights abuses in his homeland, has been released from federal detention more than five months after being swept up in the Trump administration's mass immigration enforcement operation.
Guan was released and reunited with his mother on Tuesday, nearly a week after being granted asylum by an immigration judge who determined that he faced a well-founded fear of persecution if sent back to China.
''I'm in a great mood,'' Guan, 38, told The Associated Press on Wednesday. ''I didn't feel the excitement yesterday. I felt I was still in prison, but today many friends have come to see me.''
Guan, who is staying temporarily in Binghamton, New York, said he has not yet had time to think about what he will do in the longer term.
Hs mother, Luo Yun, who traveled to the U.S. from her home in Taiwan to support her son, said she finally felt relieved.
''For five and half months I didn't sleep one good sleep, but today I feel assured,'' Luo said.
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.