A teenage immigrant girl from Honduras, who spent four years separated from her father, has been finally reunited with him, but it's all too late.

Heydi Gámez García, 13, will be disconnected from life support at a local New York hospital Thursday evening by her father Manuel Gámez, who on Saturday arrived on a plane after immigration officials granted him a special two-week parole to say goodbye to his daughter.

"I am very sad, really depressed,' the distraught Honduran dad told DailyMail over the phone on Thursday afternoon.

'The hardest moments are coming.'

The young girl had been battling bouts of depression amidst President Donald Trump's anti-immigration policies that kept her away from her dad, who in June had been arrested after trying to reenter the United States after he was deported in 2016.

On July 3 just after midnight, Heydi was found hanging from her bedroom closet with a phone-charging cable tied around her neck by her aunt who decided to cheer her up with a snack and a refreshment.

She was transported to the hospital and sadly declared brain-dead a week later.

Family lawyer Anibal Romero blamed the Trump administrations asylum stance as one of the main reasons why Heydi tried to end her life.

'Words matter, tweets matter,' Romero told DailyMail on Thursday.

'When the president threatens to deport millions of people, it really causes anxiety, causes fear, especially in children who are afraid of losing their parents. Politicians should be very careful with the words that are used. It doesn’t matter that it’s on social networks. ... Today it’s Heydi, tomorrow it will be someone else.'

Manuel Gámez looks over his daughter Heydi Gámez García, who attempted to end her life

Heydi Gámez García lost hope that she would be reunited with her father after he was arrested while trying to enter the United States in June, almost three months after her 13th birthday

The Honduran teenager had spent the last four years separated from her father.

Manuel was living in the United States as an undocumented immigrant when he was forced to to fly back home to El Progreso, Honduras, in June 2014 after his father was assassinated by gang members who demanded his SUV.

His mother succumbed to a battle with diabetes the following year, which drove him to making the decision of sending Heydi and her aunt Zoila, who at the time was underage, to live with his four other siblings in Long Island, New York, because he considered their Central American nation to be too dangerous a place for the girls to be raised.

Heydi (left) arrived to the United States in 2015 and spent only two months at a shelter for migrant minors before she was released to her an aunt Jessica (right)

Heydi was granted asylum in June 2016, a year after she entered the United States

A saddened Heydi Gámez Garcia kept to herself in a bedroom and was found shortly after midnight July 3 hanging from a closet

Heydi was the first to make it across the Mexico-United States border in July 2015.

She was granted asylum in June 2016 by the U.S. government, which awarded permanent residency in the United States, and quickly picked up on the English language.

That same year Manuel attempted to cross the border but was arrested by the Border Patrol in McAllen, Texas. He was intercepted once again in September 2017 by immigration agents near Santa Teresa, N.M. he tried to enter the country and was convicted of illegally re-entering and was sentenced to 45 days in prison before he was deported to Honduras in November.

Amidst pleas from his daughter to be reconnected again - she was even giving him English lessons through video calls - Manuel promised his distraught daughter he would once again try to evade the strict border measures, especially after she turned 13 in March.

The determined parent made it to Mexico in early June and gave his daughter the heads up that he was on his way back to New York.

Manuel told his daughter that as soon as he made it to Houston it would just take him about a week before they would be together.

'It has been difficult to be away from her,' Manuel said.

'As a father you always want to be with your children. I was hoping to be with her again.'

But just like the previous other times, his path to reuniting with Heydi was once again blocked.

On July 13, Immigration and Customs Enforcement followed through with a request from Romero, who was assisted by Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, and gave Manuel permission to travel from the holding facility in Texas to be with his daughter - just a few years too late.

Manuel shared of photo collage of his daughter along with a heartbreaking caption on his Facebook account Wednesday morning.

'It will be difficult to accept your departure, my princess, with the hope that in heaven you will be a little angel of God and that you will give me strength when I can't continue without you, my love.'

Heydi is slated to be buried next Tuesday before Manuel flies back to turn himself in.

Romero hopes immigration officials would grant him a chance to prove his asylum case.

'This is a man who is completely emotionally destroyed, and locking him in a prison would kill him,' Romero said.

'Apart from that, if the government deported him, his life is at risk in Honduras and a tragedy could become another tragedy.'