A Quiet Reminder: Immigration Law, Human Rights, and Due Process
Today, our office represented an asylum seeker at the San Francisco Immigration Court. Given the current climate, where individuals are being detained even when appearing for their hearings, our client came fully prepared for the possibility of being taken into ICE custody. He preferred that outcome over receiving a final order of removal in absentia.
To our relief, ICE did not appear. More importantly, the Immigration Judge listened attentively to the claim, issued clear guidance, and allowed the client to return with additional supporting documentation. It was a reminder that, even within a difficult system, due process still matters, and can happen.
This experience brought me back to a broader reflection.
There is often a debate about whether immigration is a legal privilege or a human right. Under international law, including the 1951 Refugee Convention and Article 14 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, people have the right to seek asylum if they face persecution based on race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group. While countries do have the sovereign right to control their borders and enforce immigration laws, that right coexists with legal and moral obligations to protect the vulnerable.
Critics may argue that people should “just follow the law” or that "you wouldn’t open your house to strangers." But a country is not a private residence; it is a legal entity bound by domestic and international obligations. The right to request asylum is not the same as the right to enter freely—it is the right to be heard, to be considered, and to be protected if one qualifies under the law.
What we witnessed in court today was not idealism, it was a small but meaningful exercise of lawful procedure and human dignity.