Trump Administration to Couple: Ditch Adopted Daughter or Risk Exile
Last month when the World Health Organization dubbed the coronavirus outbreak a pandemic, State Department officials gave Robin Gallite and her husband Alli, both 41, a choice: Return to the U.S. from Lagos, Nigeria, quickly before the countrys airports closed and the health-care system deteriorated, or stay with their 16-month-old daughter, Nike, and risk getting stuck in the country.
After applying for her adoption in 2018, Robin and Alli took home Adenike-RaeNike for shortin August from Cross River, a Nigerian state bordering Cameroon. The couple planned to stay with Allis family in Lagos for several months while they waited for Nikes adoption to be finalized by local officials and until they received a U.S. visa for their daughter. They had wanted to spend time with Allis family before returning home to the U.S. so Robin could introduce Nike to her own mother. The couple had heard from other parents that obtaining a visa for adopted Nigerian children took months, but they were optimistic about being able to fly back to the U.S. with their daughter in the spring of 2020.
That confidence quickly faded. In February, President Donald Trump placed Nigeria on his travel ban list along with other countries with predominantly large Muslim populations. Weeks later, the coronavirus epidemic ballooned, causing the closure of borders around the world and forcing Americans like Alli and Robin to scramble to find a way out on evacuation flights. The dual events left the couple with a harrowing choice: Even if they were to get on one of the few flights out of Lagos, officials told them that they would not be able to bring their daughter with them.
Alli and Robins story may be uniquely traumatic. But it highlights the emotional and logistical difficulties many Americans are facing in trying to get back to the U.S.difficulties that include trying to book evacuation flights, having to uproot professional and familial structures, and being forced to deal with inconsistent communication with U.S. consulate representatives. The couples situation exposes the real-life limitations Americans face in trying to repatriate from a country under Trumps travel ban and raises questions about how the State Department is handling already in-process visa applications during the coronavirus outbreak.
https://news.yahoo.com/trump-administration-couple-ditch-adopted-082641731.html