U.S. drops plan to deport Chinese national who exposed Xinjiang abuses, rights activists say
The Department of Homeland Security has dropped its plan to deport a Chinese national who entered the country illegally, two rights activists said on Monday (December 22, 2025), after his plight raised public concerns that the man, if deported, would be punished by Beijing for helping expose human rights abuses in China's Xinjiang region. Also Read | U.S. accuses two Chinese researchers of smuggling in ‘potential agroterrorism weapon’ Rayhan Asat, a human rights lawyer who assisted in the case, said Guan Heng's lawyer received a letter from DHS stating its decision to withdraw its request to send Guan to Uganda. Ms. Asat said she now expects Guan's asylum case to “proceed smoothly and favourably.” Zhou Fengsuo, executive director of the advocacy group Human Rights in China, also confirmed the administration's decision not to deport Guan. “We're really happy,” Ms. Zhou said. The Department of Homeland Security didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's database lists Guan, 38, as a detainee. His legal team is working to secure his release from an ICE detention facility in New York on bond, both Mr. Zhou and Ms. Asat said. Guan in 2020 secretly filmed detention facilities in Xinjiang, which activists say have been used to lock up as many as 1 million members of ethnic minorities in the region, especially the Uyghurs. Beijing has denied allegations of rights abuses and says it has run vocational training programs to help local residents learn employable skills while rooting out radical thoughts. Knowing he could not release the video footage while in China, Guan left the mainland in 2021 for Hong Kong and then flew to Ecuador, which at the time did not require visas for Chinese nationals. He then travelled to the Bahamas, where he bought a small inflatable boat and an outboard motor before setting off for Florida, according to the nongovernmental organisation Human Rights in China. After nearly 23 hours at sea, Guan reached the coastline of Florida, according to the group, and his video footage of the detention facilities was released on YouTube, providing further evidence of rights abuse in Xinjiang, the rights group said. But Guan was soon doxxed, and his family back in China was summoned by state security authorities, the group said. Guan sought asylum and moved to a small town outside Albany, New York, where he tried to live a quieter life, the group said, until he was detained by ICE agents in August. Public support for Guan, including in Congress, has swelled in recent weeks after Zhou's group publicised his case. Before Guan appeared in court earlier this month, U.S. lawmakers called for providing him with a safe haven. “Guan Heng put himself at risk to document concentration camps in Xinjiang, part of the CCP's genocide against Uyghurs,” the congressional Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission wrote on X.com, referring to the Chinese Communist Party by its acronym. “Now in the United States, he faces deportation to China, where he would likely be...
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