Family Member Terminal Cancer Can Get Son to Come on Visa

San Jose resident's dream of seeing Vietnamese mother before dying shattered by visa rejection (8-29-2017)

Update: Tardily Tuesday, immigration officials reversed their decision. Read the latest news here.

SAN JOSE — After 33-twelvemonth-former Trinh Phan was diagnosed with concluding lung cancer, she shared her terminal wish with family unit members: to see her mother again.

Only her mother, Nguyen Thi Hoa, lives in Vietnam — and the U.S. Embassy & Consulate at that place last month rejected her asking for a temporary travel visa. Embassy officials, family members say, feared Hoa would stay in the U.South. for expert.

Phan — who immigrated to the U.Due south. from Vietnam in 2003 and lives in San Jose  — last saw her mother in 2012. Aside from her husband and son, she has only one other family member in the U.Due south. — a cousin in Dallas. Equally her condition rapidly deteriorates, loved ones are trying desperately to reunite mother and girl, calling on local politicians and community members to lend their voices.

"We don't have any time left at this moment," said Kandice Nguyen, Phan's sister-in-police, who is acting as a family spokesperson. "Every minute that goes by, y'all encounter a drastic change in her condition. We're not going to lose hope, simply we don't know if we're going to take this last wish fulfilled and we're very concerned nearly that."

Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren's office is working with the consulate and the U.South. State Section to meet if officials can revisit Hoa's case. The family this month started a petition calling on the consulate and President Donald Trump to issue Hoa a visa.

"They claimed that Trinh'south female parent was unable to convince the consulate that her but desire to enter the United States was to visit her dying girl," said the petition by Katherine Le, Nguyen'due south girl, which had nerveless more than 15,000 signatures as of Monday afternoon. "In actuality, this is truly the Simply reason why her mother urgently needs a temporary visa to visit the Usa."

In an Aug. 17 alphabetic character to Lofgren, the family detailed the severity of Phan's status and her mother's failed request for a visa. Lofgren last week responded with her own letter to President Trump, in which she requested a company visa or humanitarian parole for Hoa.

"I feel compelled to do what I can to bring this case to the attention of the U.Southward. State Department and the U.S. Embassy in Vietnam and urge them to reconsider because Mrs. Phan deserves to exist reunited with her mother during her final days," Lofgren said in a statement Monday. "I am hopeful that, along with my efforts, the outpouring of compassion and support from Mrs. Phan'due south neighbors, friends, and community will assistance bring a favorable and timely resolution to this matter."

Through coordinated efforts by Lofgren's office and the Country Department — and later on submitting a second visa application late final week — Hoa has been granted an expedited visa interview, Nguyen said. On Th, the 57-yr-sometime volition have an opportunity tofurtherexplicate to the consulate her daughter'due south medical condition and exactly why she wants to travel to the U.S. The State Department declined to comment on the manner, citing federal privacy laws. The U.Due south. consulate in Vietnam, located in Saigon, did not reply to requests for comment.

Phan — who'south married to Young Nguyen and has an viii-year-quondam son, David — became a "proud" U.S. citizen in 2010, according to family unit. She was diagnosed with metastatic Stage 4 lung cancer and astute respiratory distress syndrome in July, a rapidly progressive affliction seen in critically sick patients, according to the American Lung Association. The main complication resulting from this status is fluid leaking into the lungs, making breathing "hard or impossible," according to the lung association.

Phan, a nonsmoker, is in the ICU at O'Connor Infirmary in San Jose, where she has lost about 25 pounds and is fully dependent on oxygen, Nguyen said. She'south been given no more than a few months to alive.

"Her lungs have completely complanate," said Nguyen. "It's quite a dire and daunting situation for our family."

Meanwhile, Nguyen said the family is filled with gratitude at the outpouring of support that they've received from community members.

"Our objective in the terminate is to reunite Trinh with her mother," said Nguyen. "We will go to all ends to ensure those atmospheric condition are met."

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Source: https://www.mercurynews.com/2017/08/29/immigration-officials-in-vietnam-deny-mother-visa-to-see-her-dying-daughter-in-san-jose/

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