JOURNALIST MANUEL DURAN WINS ASYLUM
Duran: “This victory is dedicated to all the journalists being persecuted in this moment, because no journalist should have to fear to do their job.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. – After a years-long fight, the IJʿ’s (IJʿ) client and renowned journalist Manuel Duran has won his asylum case.
Duran was arrested in April 2018 while covering a Memphis protest focused on local law enforcement’s practice of detaining suspected immigrants and handing them over to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Following his arrest, ICE detained Duran for 15 months.
"The positive resolution of my case today is a triumph in the fight to defend the First Amendment,” said Duran. “This victory is dedicated to all the journalists being persecuted in this moment, because no journalist should have to fear to do their job. El Salvador has been characterized as a country hostile to the press, especially during the Bukele administration.”
Duran’s case has received national attention as several organizations, focusing on the mistreatment of journalists around the world, filed amicus briefs on his behalf including: the American Society of News Editors, Associated Press Media Editors, National Association of Hispanic Journalists, National Hispanic Media Coalition, PEN America, and Reporters Without Borders.
"I'm so honored to be a part of this litigation and to get to usher Manuel in the last lap of his very long journey seeking asylum in this country,” said Casey Bryant, Executive Director for Advocates for Immigrant Rights. “The Immigration Judge noted that the First Amendment is one of the most cherished rights of this nation and thanked Manuel for his bravery in daring to report corruption in El Salvador. This was truly a group effort, with Manuel at the center, systematically laying his claim for asylum with his journalistic eloquence. He told me afterwards that he is now more empowered to fight for justice. As am I!"
“Manuel’s case has been a true team effort, anchored by him, his partner and her incredible family as well as by several lawyers across multiple time zones and advocates in Memphis, Atlanta, and beyond,” said Gracie Willis, a Senior Lead Attorney with the IJʿ’s Southeast Immigrant Freedom Initiative. “The immigration courts don’t always do the right thing, so today’s victory was far from guaranteed. Manuel endured so much to get to this point: an immigration detention system designed to force people to give up their cases by subjecting them to inhumane conditions, deportation attempts, and confronting repression of the press in his own hometown on Memphis. Manuel’s case is also a reminder that the vast majority of the more than 20,000 people in immigrant detention and the 1.5 million people in the immigration court backlog do not have access to this level of support, nor should it be required to win a case in an administrative agency. The path to this win reminds us of the need to end immigrant detention and reimagine our entire immigration court system. Still, today, after four arduous years, we can finally take a deep breath, knowing Manuel is safe.”
“I am grateful in my heart to my lawyers with IJʿ for your impeccable work since my fight to remain in this country began in April 2018, and to Advocates for Immigrant Rights for representing me in my asylum case,” said Duran.