The Cuban returned to the island after an ICE order, while his youngest daughter faces delicate health problems.
Madrid, Spain.- The Cuban Davy Alemán Oropesa ended seven years of life in the United States after the Immigration and Customs Control ServiceS (ICE, for its acronym in English) would notify you that you should leave the country. To avoid a prolonged detention process, he chose to “self -ported” and board a flight back to Cuba from Miami International Airport.
The farewell, registered by the journalist Javier Díaz, of News Univisión, showed the most difficult moments: “Very sad images, the Cuban Davy Alemán Oropesa this Sunday, September 14, decides to return to Cuba voluntarily, which would technically a self -exporting, because the government told him that he had until today to leave the country,” he explained.
The game meant a hard goodbye for his wife, Yisel Miguel Sarduy, an American citizen, and for his two daughters. One of them, just two years, has already undergone open heart surgery and now needs a transplant. “I don’t know how I am going to pay the rent, or how I am going to do to serve the girl,” Yisel confessed in tears, aware of the burden he must face in solitude.
German said that he made the decision to avoid falling into migratory custody and hoping that the family reunification process, requested by his wife before USCIS, allows him to return legally in the future. However, that procedure could take years and also depends on being granted a migratory forgiveness.
The family ensures that their economic situation is precarious, since Yisel stopped working to devote himself to the care of the little girl, whose health requires permanent care. The forced return of German leaves the family nucleus without fixed support and at a particularly delicate moment.
