Iranian student back in US after being deported

Sara Yarjani (left), who was deported a week ago, is greeted by her sister Sahar Muranovic at Los Angeles International Airport in Los Angeles, California, on her return to the US on February 4, 2017. AFP PHOTO

What you need to know:

  • The controversial order, which prompted an uproar and caused travel chaos, was temporarily blocked by a federal judge on Friday.
  • She said she planned to pamper her best friend before they head back to the classroom.

LOS ANGELES

An Iranian student deported in the wake of Donald Trump's travel ban was back in the United States on Sunday, one of thousands of travellers rushing to enter the country after a judge temporarily blocked the ban.

Sara Yarjani was met at Los Angeles airport by her sister — who flew in from nearby Washington state — and several attorneys from the American Civil Liberties Union who fought for her return.

Several people clapped and one woman shouted "welcome to the United States" as the visibly shaken 35-year-old made her way through a throng of reporters and cameramen.

"I am so grateful to all the lawyers and others that helped me ... because to me that is America and I am very grateful," she said tearfully.

Ironically, many of the same customs and border patrol agents who had been involved in her deportation the previous week were on hand Sunday to greet her and rush her through immigration.

"They came and they said we're just gonna get you through so you get out faster," she said. "I knew a lot of them because I was here, detained for 23 hours last time" before being deported.

Yarjani, a graduate student in holistic health at the California Institute for Human Science, near San Diego, had her student visa revoked and was sternly put on a plane back to Vienna last week after Trump's executive order blocking citizens from seven Muslim-majority countries, including Iran, went into effect.

The controversial order, which prompted an uproar and caused travel chaos, was temporarily blocked by a federal judge on Friday.

However, Trump's administration scurried over the weekend to get an emergency freeze of the judge's order, prompting visa holders to rush to board US-bound flights before yet another legal ruling comes down in what is shaping up to be a fierce legal battle between immigration advocacy groups and the government.

"The legal landscape has been shifting and we are hopeful that the courts will continue to challenge this unconstitutional order," said Ian Kysel, an ACLU attorney who worked on Yarjani's case and who was at the airport to greet her Sunday.

"I think this moment has shown the strength of our constitution and our institutions," he added. "There are so many cases pending across the country and we are going to fight for all of them."

As for Yarjani, she said although she had been traumatized by her ordeal, she was happy to be back on US soil to finish her studies.

"Whenever I was in Europe, where I have lived for the last 20 years, if ever anybody criticized America or Americans I would be the one defending them," she said. "And from everything I've seen in the last week, that's even more true than ever."

Pontea Dianati, 30, a fellow student who was at the airport to greet Yarjani and herself an Iranian-American, said she was horrified by the travel ban but hopeful that it would be overturned.

She said she planned to pamper her best friend before they head back to the classroom.

"I want to tell her 'I knew you'd come back, you're good people, Somebody's got your back'," she said.