US Grants Asylum to Chinese Man Who Filmed Xinjiang Camps
Judge cites credible testimony and risk of retaliation against Guan’s family as basis for asylum amid a 10% approval rate for such cases in 2025, federal data shows.
- On Wednesday, Immigration Judge Charles Ouslander granted asylum to Guan Heng, 38, after finding he had a `well founded fear` of persecution if returned to China.
- Guan Heng secretly filmed Xinjiang detention centers in 2020 before fleeing China to publish the footage, releasing most on YouTube and traveling via Hong Kong, Ecuador, the Bahamas, then Florida by boat.
- Detained since August, Guan Heng appeared by video from Broome County Correctional Facility and said he `sympathized with the Uyghurs who were persecuted`, while Mobile Pathways reports asylum approvals fell to 10%.
- DHS has 30 days to appeal Ouslander's ruling, and the judge urged a swift decision as Guan has been detained for about five months; DHS reserves the right to appeal and did not release him.
- Amid low asylum wins, Chen Chuangchuang called the ruling a `textbook example of why asylum should exist`, highlighting the rare success since President Donald Trump's return to office.
115 Articles
115 Articles
US Judge Grants Asylum to Chinese National Who Filmed China’s Uyghur Prison Camps
A pro-democracy activist who fled China after documenting what he described as concentration camps in Xinjiang was granted asylum on Jan. 28 by a New York immigration judge, amid widespread concern about the risks he would face if deported. Guan Heng, 38, applied for asylum after arriving in the United States illegally in 2021. He was living in New York state before he was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in August 2025. The…
Chinese national who exposed human rights abuses in his homeland is granted asylum to remain in U.S.
An immigration judge on Wednesday granted asylum to a Chinese national who he said had a “well founded fear” of persecution if sent back to China after exposing human rights abuses there.
Chinese national who exposed human rights abuses against Uyghurs is granted asylum to remain in U.S.
An immigration judge on Wednesday granted asylum to a Chinese national who he said had a “well founded fear” of persecution if sent back to China after exposing human rights abuses there.
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