ICE runt concentratiekampen in de VS voor vluchtelingen en kinderen

ICE
houdt immigranten gevangen onder uitermate barre omstandigheden,
waar isolatiefolter aan de orde van de dag is. 

In het
hieronder opgenomen artikel, geschreven door Maryam Saleh, verhaalt
zij over de vreselijke omstandigheden waaronder ICE immigranten uit
Latijns-Amerika gevangen worden gehouden….. (zij gaat verder niet in op de omgang met vluchtelingenkinderen

Onlangs
werd al bekend gemaakt dat kinderen van immigranten nog steeds
gescheiden worden van hun ouders en moeten leven in omstandigheden
die te vergelijken zijn met de concentratiekampen van de nazi’s
tijdens WOII…… Hoorde eergisternacht op de BBC dat men zelfs
tot 100 kinderen in een soort van grote cel gevangen houdt…… Peuters lopen met of vuile luiers of helemaal geen luiers, zodat de kleding ongelofelijk vies wordt…..

Over kleding gesproken: pubers moeten soms wekenlang doen met de kleding die ze aanhebben….. Voedsel dat wordt verstrekt is niet zelden bedorven en de oudere kinderen moeten de kleine kinderen helpen, kinderen die zij niet kennen, noch dat deze pubers ervaring hebben in het zorgen voor kleine kinderen…… Het ontbreekt de kinderen veelal aan gezond voedsel, waar ze vaak zelfs te weinig te eten krijgen…… De sanitaire voorzieningen zijn smerig, zoals je al begrepen had…..

Uit het
artikel van Saleh, gepubliceerd op The Intercept, aandacht voor
het grote aantal gevallen van isolatie in de gevangenissen van ICE, 
of in door ICE gehuurde faciliteiten voor oudere vluchtelingen……. Voorts zijn ook hier de sanitaire
voorzieningen smerig en is het eten zonder meer slecht te noemen, zoals gezegd niet zelden met bedorven voedsel……

Het meest schunnige is wel, dat ondanks de grote ophef eerder over het scheiden van ouders en kinderen, deze scheiding nog steeds wordt doorgevoerd, om zo nieuwe vluchtelingen af te schrikken zodat ze niet naar de VS vluchten……

Het voorgaande kan dan ook tot geen andere conclusie leiden dan dat we hier (zoals eerder opgemerkt) te maken hebben met concentratiekampen en dat beste bezoeker kan niet vaak genoeg gezegd worden…….

Overbodig te melden dat e.e.a recht ingaat tegen het VN Vluchtelingenverdrag……

Lees en
zie hoe de VS langzaam maar zeker verandert in een fascistische
superstaat, waar geen empathie meer bestaat en men zelfs kinderen
behandelt als waren het criminelen, alleen omdat ze zogenaamd illegaal zijn…….. De VS dat meer en meer de
dienst uitmaakt op de wereld en enorme vluchtelingenstromen opgang
brengt, ook in Latijns-Amerika…… (het gros van de vluchtelingen uit Latijns-Amerika die naar de VS zijn vertrokken, zijn op de vlucht geslagen voor gewelddadige fascistische regimes, die ofwel door de VS in het zadel zijn geholpen, zoals in Honduras, dan wel door de VS worden gesteund in de terreuruitoefening op de eigen bevolking)

AS
PUSH AGAINST ICE EXPLOITATION OF SOLITARY CONFINEMENT GAINS MOMENTUM,
CORY BOOKER CALLS FOR HEARINGS

Maryam
Saleh

June
26 2019, 8:34 p.m.

Afbeeldingsresultaat voor AS PUSH AGAINST ICE EXPLOITATION OF SOLITARY CONFINEMENT GAINS MOMENTUM, CORY BOOKER CALLS FOR HEARINGS

Sen.
Cory Booker participates in the Black Economic Alliance’s
presidential forum in Charleston, S.C., on June 15, 2019. 
Photo:
Sean Rayford/Getty Images

SEN.
CORY BOOKER,
 D-N.J., is calling on Senate
Judiciary Committee Chair Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., to hold a hearing
into Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s “egregious and
appalling abuses,” including the widespread use of solitary
confinement.

In
letter to
Graham, Booker, who sits on the Judiciary Committee, referred to
solitary confinement as a “form of torture” and cited a
recent 
investigation by
the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, The
Intercept, NBC News, and four other reporting partners into ICE’s
use of solitary confinement. Our reporting, which included a review
of more than 8,400 reports describing placement in solitary
confinement from 2012 to early 2017, found that ICE uses isolation as
a go-to tool, rather than a last resort, to punish vulnerable
detained immigrants.

The
news stories detail numerous examples of individuals placed in
confinement without justification, which prompted a whistleblower to
come forward to shine a light on these abuses,” wrote Booker,
referring to Department of Homeland Security (DHS) employee 
Ellen
Gallagher
,
who quietly raised the alarm about ICE’s use of solitary
confinement for four years before going public in interviews with the
reporting consortium.

While
different carceral systems use varying terms to describe solitary
confinement — ICE calls it “segregation” — it is generally
understood to be the practice of holding individuals in isolation
with no human contact for at least 22 hours a day.

ICE’s
own policy seems to recognize the dangers of solitary confinement,”
Booker continued. “It appears ICE has been consistently violating
its own policy on the use of solitary confinement.”

His
letter to Graham comes on the heels of a 
letter from
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., to the acting director of
ICE, 
demanding
answers
 about
the agency’s use of solitary confinement and extensively citing our
investigation. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., another member of
the Judiciary Committee, also 
called for
a hearing into ICE’s use of solitary in response to our
investigation last month. The panel’s Democrats do not have
independent authority to schedule a hearing, hence the request to
Graham.

Booker,
in his letter, said that a Judiciary Committee hearing about ICE
would give the panel a chance to interrogate “grossly unsanitary
conditions at detention facilities,” as well as to gather more
information about forthcoming immigration raids that President Donald
Trump “flippantly alluded to” on Twitter last week. The
president, after announcing that the agency would begin to round up
“millions” of immigrants this week — 
a
logistically impossible endeavor
 —
on Saturday put the ICE operation on hold.

Graham,
an anti-immigrant hard-liner and apologist for the Trump
administration’s harsh policies, convened a committee hearing —
at Democrats’ request — in March to investigate Customs and
Border Protection for its actions at the southern border. Graham used
the hearing as an opportunity for 
fearmongering about
migrants seeking asylum in the United States. The CBP, like ICE,
falls under the umbrella of the Department of Homeland Security.

The
oversight hearing on CBP was not enough, Booker wrote. “In order to
fully address the scope of ICE’s serious and egregious violations,
the Committee must convene an oversight hearing. It’s becoming
increasingly clear that ICE has become nothing more than a lethal
weapon in the Trump administration’s war on immigrants and
communities of color, and we cannot be silent.”

BOOKER’S
HARSH STANCE
 against
ICE in the letter to Graham is in line with the tack he’s taken on
the presidential campaign trail, where he’s been a staunch critic
of the agency’s policies. In February, he, along with other 2020
hopefuls Warren, Sen. Kamala Harris, and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand,
voted against a spending bill, citing ICE. At the time,
Booker 
said that
bill would give ICE and CBP “hundreds of millions of additional
dollars with little oversight or appropriate guardrails.” In April,
he 
reintroduced
legislation
 to
enact protections for detained immigrants.

Booker has
also been an outspoken advocate of the rights of prisoners throughout
his federal career. At the same time, he’s remained close to a
party boss in his home state who oversees a jail that serves as an
immigration detention center and is rife with abuses, drawing
the ire of local progressives.

As
Politico 
reported on
Tuesday, Booker will be in New Jersey on Friday for a
$2,800-per-person fundraiser co-hosted by Essex County Executive
Joseph DiVincenzo. In that role, DiVincenzo oversees the Essex County
Correctional Facility in Newark, which has a $40 million per year
contract with ICE — and was called out for poor conditions in two
DHS Inspector General reports just this year.

Twenty-one
progressive organizations last week sent a letter to Booker calling
on him to cancel the fundraiser, Politico reported. “I believe that
Booker wants to make sure that the funnel of money keeps coming
through, and that’s why he’s supporting Joe [DiVincenzo] right
now,” Carrine Murphy, a paralegal who is critical of county jails’
contracts with ICE, 
told
Politico
.

In
February, the Office of Inspector General 
identified a
number of issues at the jail, including food safety issues, with
“potentially contaminated food being served to detainees.” One
example noted “a detainee in segregation said the food
was so bad that he had started a liquid only diet and was considering
a full hunger strike.”

Earlier
this month, the Inspector General issued a follow-up 
reportbuilding
on the same inspection and said that “detainees are placed in
disciplinary segregation before the disciplinary hearing panel finds
the detainee guilty of the charged offense.”

The
facility has reported making improvements in its solitary confinement
practices, “including documenting why detainee strip searches
were conducted and revising recreation schedules to add additional
recreation time,” the Inspector General wrote.

The
ICIJ and Intercept investigation found 100 records of placement in
solitary confinement at the Essex County jail from 2013 to early
2017. Twenty-seven of those placements were due to disciplinary
reasons, while three of them were the result of a suicide risk.
Overall, we found at least 373 instances of detained immigrants being
placed in isolation because they were potentially suicidal — and
another 200-plus cases of people already in solitary confinement
moved to “suicide watch” or another form of observation, in many
cases in another solitary cell.

Immigration
is expected to be a hot-button issue throughout the presidential
campaign. Booker and Warren will both participate in the first 2020
Democratic presidential debate in Miami, Florida, on Wednesday night.

==================================

Zie ook:

Putin misbruikt vluchtelingen om een hele grote witte voet bij Trump te halen

ELIZABETHWARREN CONDEMNS ICE’S “CRUEL AND UNNECESSARY” USE OF SOLITARYCONFINEMENT, DEMANDS ANSWERS

AHOMELAND SECURITY WHISTLEBLOWER GOES PUBLIC ABOUT ICE ABUSE OFSOLITARY CONFINEMENT

Thousands
of Immigrants Suffer in Solitary Confinement in ICE Detention

Humanitaire hulp aan vluchtelingen in woestijn: gevangenisstraf tot 20 jaar

Vrijwilligers die vluchtelingen in de woestijn van de VS proberen te redden worden gevangengezet……

De VS geeft miljarden uit om verkiezingen elders te beïnvloeden en daar blijft het niet bij…….

Obama steekt zichzelf volkomen onterecht een grote veer in de vieze bips

VS gebruikt chemische wapens tegen ongewapende vluchtelingen waaronder kinderen‘ (zie ook de links in dat bericht)

Mijn excuus voor de vormgeving, krijg het niet op orde.

Particuliere gevangeniswezen VS buit vluchtelingen uit >> dwangarbeid onontkoombaar

Een staaltje smerige uitbuiterij waar je werkelijk schijtziek van wordt als je het leest: vluchtelingen die door ICE in een particuliere gevangenis worden opgesloten (!!), krijgen de kans om te werken en dat is gezien de prijzen die ze voor simpele levensbehoeften als tandpasta en deodorant geen overbodige luxe…… Probleem alleen is dat deze gevangenen per dag zegge en schrijve $ 1.– ontvangen…… Ter illustratie: een tube tandpasta van een paar dollar kost daar $ 11.– en een kleine deodorant stick $ 3.35, ofwel 11 dagen werk en 3,35 dagen voor respectievelijk de tandpasta en de deodorant……..

Het geteisem dat de firma runt die dit alles mogelijk maakt, vindt het verder normaal dat men van elektronisch overgemaakt geld door familieleden/vrienden, 10% inhoudt voor ‘administratiekosten…’

Nogmaals: het gaat hier om vluchtelingen die gevangen zijn gezet, volkomen ingaand tegen de mensenrechten en het VN Vluchtelingenverdrag……

Uiteraard ontkent de organisatie, Geo Group Inc (GEO.N), die de deze en andere gevangenissen ‘winstgevend’ moeten houden, dat de gevangen gehouden vluchtelingen zo onbeschoft en openlijk worden uitgebuit….. 

Geo Group Inc. is een ronduit misdadige organisatie! (die zich scheel verdient aan het uitbuiten van slaven uh gevangenen…… Het is dan ook zaak dat er zoveel mogelijk mensen worden veroordeeld tot een gevangenisstraf….. In verhouding zitten er ook nog eens veel meer gekleurden in VS gevangenissen, terwijl deze groep in de VS nog steeds een minderheid is……

Laat je ook ‘verrassen’ en zie wat er allemaal ongestraft gedaan kan worden in het land van de ongekende mogelijkheden (in zwaar negatieve zin voor de onderlaag en in zeer positieve zin voor de ‘happy’ few). Hier het artikel van Michelle Conlin en Kristina Cooke, zoals gepubliceerd op Reuters:

TRUMP EFFECT

JANUARY 18, 2019 / 7:09 AM

$11 toothpaste: Immigrants pay big for basics at private ICE lock-ups

Michelle ConlinKristina Cooke

9 MIN READ

NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Detained in a California lockup with hundreds of other immigrants seeking asylum, Duglas Cruz faced a choice.

Afbeeldingsresultaat voor $11 toothpaste: Immigrants pay big for basics at private ICE lock-ups

FILE PHOTO: ICE detainees are seen at the Adelanto immigration detention center, which is run by the Geo Group Inc (GEO.N), in Adelanto, California, U.S., April 13, 2017. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo

He could content himself with a jailhouse diet that he said left him perpetually hungry. Or he could labor in the prison’s kitchen to earn money to buy extra food at the commissary.

Cruz went to work. But his $1-a-day salary at the privately run Adelanto Detention Facility did not stretch far.

A can of commissary tuna sold for $3.25. That is more than four times the price at a Target store near the small desert town of Adelanto, about two hours northeast of Los Angeles. Cruz stuck with ramen noodles at 58 cents a package, double the Target price. A miniature deodorant stick, at $3.35 and more than three days’ wages, was an impossible luxury, he said.

If I bought that there wouldn’t be enough money for food,” Cruz said.

Tuna and deodorant would seem minor worries for detainees such as Cruz. Now 25, he sought asylum after fleeing gangs trying to recruit him in his native Honduras, a place where saying “no” can mean execution.

But immigration attorneys say the pricey commissary goods are part of a broader strategy by private prisons to harness cheap inmate labor to lower operating costs and boost profits.

Immigrants and activists say facilities such as Adelanto, owned by Boca Raton, Fla.-based Geo Group Inc (GEO.N), the nation’s largest for-profit corrections company, deliberately skimp on essentials, even food, to coerce detainees to labor for pennies an hour to supplement meager rations.

Geo Group spokesperson Pablo Paez called those allegations “completely false.” He said detainees are given meals approved by dieticians, the labor program is strictly voluntary, and wage rates are federally mandated.

The company said Geo Group contracts with outside vendors to run its commissaries, whose prices “are in line with comparable local markets.” It also said Geo Group makes a “minimal commission” on commissary items, most of which goes into a “welfare fund” to purchase recreational equipment and other items for detainees.

Relatives can send money electronically to fund their loved ones’ commissary accounts, for fees that can reach as high as 10 percent of the amount deposited, some families report. But for many immigrant detainees, scrubbing toilets or mopping floors is the only way they say they can earn enough to stay clean and fed.

You “either work for a few cents an hour or live without basic things like soap, shampoo, deodorant and food,” detainee Wilhen Hill Barrientos, 67, said in a class-action lawsuit filed last year by the Southern Poverty Law Center against Nashville-based CoreCivic Inc (CXW.N), the nation’s second-largest for-profit prison operator. In the complaint, Barrientos said guards told him to “use his fingers” when he asked for toilet paper at the Stewart Detention Center, located in rural Lumpkin, Georgia.

Detainees are challenging what they say is an oppressive business model in which the companies deprive them of essentials to force them to work for sub-minimum wages, money that is soon recaptured in the firms’ own commissaries.

These private prison companies are profiting off of what is essentially a company-store scenario,” said the SPLC’s Meredith Stewart, a lead attorney on the class action.

Immigrant rights groups have filed similar lawsuits against CoreCivic and Geo Group in California, Colorado, Texas and Washington.

Government watchdogs and lawmakers are taking notice too.

In November, 11 U.S. senators, including 2020 presidential hopeful Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, sent letters to Geo Group and CoreCivic lambasting the “perverse profit incentive at the core of the private prison business,” which has benefited from a crackdown on illegal immigrants under U.S. President Donald Trump.

The senators cited a December 2017 report from the U.S. Office of the Inspector General documenting problems at lockups contracted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The inspector general found spoiled, moldy and expired food, and cited detainees’ complaints that hygiene products were “not provided promptly or at all,” the report said.

The lawmakers have demanded Geo Group and CoreCivic respond to allegations of detainee mistreatment.

Geo Group said a comprehensive, detailed response is underway. The company told Reuters that Geo Group has “already taken steps to remedy areas where our processes fell short of our commitment to high-quality care.”

CoreCivic spokeswoman Amanda Gilchrist said the company disagrees with the senators’ assertions, and that it provides “all daily needs” of detainees.

She said CoreCivic follows all federal standards for ICE-contracted facilities, including management of the outside vendors that run its commissaries, prices for commissary products, and fees charged to families for depositing funds into detainees’ commissary accounts.

BULL MARKET IN IMMIGRANT DETENTION

The U.S. for-profit prison industry has exploded over the past two decades. In 2016, 128,300 people – roughly 1 in 12 U.S. prisoners – were incarcerated in private lock-ups. That is an increase of 47 percent from 2000, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

Geo Group and CoreCivic together manage over half of U.S. private prison contracts, with combined revenues of nearly $4 billion in 2017. ICE is the No. 1 customer by revenue for both companies.

Trump’s immigration polices have been a boon for the industry, which spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on his election and inauguration. In fiscal 2019, the number of people in ICE detention has averaged 45,200 daily, according to agency spokesman Vincent Picard. That is up nearly 19 percent from fiscal 2017.

Both Geo Group and CoreCivic have added hundreds of immigration detention beds over the past year. Stock prices for the two companies are up about 30 percent since Trump’s election.

The government pays private prison companies fees ranging from roughly $60 to $130 daily for the care and feeding of each detainee.

At CoreCivic’s Stewart Detention Center in Georgia, which houses about 1,700 undocumented immigrants, ICE pays a per diem of $62.03 for each detainee housed there. CoreCivic’s revenue from Stewart alone was $38 million last year, court records show.

Detainee Barrientos, the lead lawsuit plaintiff, said in court documents he worked 7 days a week at the facility in order to purchase hygiene products and phone cards to call family members in Guatemala.

Those basics can add up. Reuters viewed a copy of the center’s commissary price list. It shows detainees are charged $11.02 for a 4 oz. tube of Sensodyne toothpaste, available on Amazon.com for $5.20.

Dove soap priced at $2.44 at the commissary is available for just over a dollar at Target. A 2.5 oz tube of Effergrip denture cream that sells for $4.99 at Walmart is $7.12 at the commissary.

Fees are pricey too. Vioney Gutierrez, a former detainee at Geo Group’s Adelanto facility in California, said 10 percent of the money her family spent to fund her commissary account was consumed by fees.

When my daughter put in $40, I got $36,” said Gutierrez, 37. A native of Mexico, she said she spent six months at Adelanto in 2018 after asking for asylum at a port of entry. She is currently out on bond and staying with family in Oregon while she awaits the outcome of her deportation case.

Geo Group said its inmate commissary account services are provided by a third-party vendor, and that it does not profit from those transactions.

At Adelanto, Gutierrez said it cost $1 a minute to make calls to Mexico, and even more to places further afield, prices that keep many detainees from communicating with their families.

Geo Group said ICE contracts with a third-party telecom vendor and that the company plays “no role whatsoever in communications services.”

High commissary prices have long been a complaint of prison reformers. But for immigrant detainees, many of whom borrowed money or drained savings to reach the United States, the prices are particularly prohibitive.

Cruz, the Honduran detainee, spent eight months at Adelanto last year before an immigrant rights organization paid the $10,000 bond for his release. He is now in Texas awaiting the outcome of his case.

In his final months at Adelanto, Cruz said he resorted to bartering, trading shoes he wove out of plastic bags for ramen and cookies.

Reporting By Michelle Conlin and Kristina Cooke; Editing by Marla Dickerson

Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

======================================

Mijn excuus voor de vormgeving, krijg het niet op orde.

PS: volgens zeggen zou de VS douane nog steeds kinderen scheiden van hun ouder(s) of andere familieleden……

7 Year Olds Dying In Third Reich ‘Detention’, and Waiting on Capitalist Hill

De volgende twee gedichten van Raymond Nat Turner komen van Black Agenda Report, verdere woorden zijn overbodig:

Raymond
Nat Turner
,
BAR poet-in-residence
10
Jan 2019

ICE custody for children

7
Year Olds Dying In Third Reich ‘Detention’

Papi,
are we there—
are we almost there?”
Wide-eyed
incantation
of a child, three feet plus/
60 pounds.
Exodus
leaving the lowland
six days before birthday 7…

Papi,
are we there—
are we almost there?”
Beaming birthday
celebrant
on the bus munching an un-
crushed pink frosted
cookie
from Papi’s beat up backpack

Papi,
are we there—
are we almost there?”
Her small, soft hands
celebrating
Heroics of an unshaven face chasing
Dreams; dreams
of pine tree scents
and small gifts—compliments of magic
of
his hands. Dreams of the doll her
Mother promised, before dying
suddenly;
Dreams of asylum from violence, fleeing
extractive
capitalism’s suction tube tentacles…

Papi
also had dreams of “J-Bird,” as he
called her, teaching school
and university
with compassion and skill she instructed
stick
dolls he’d crafted from fallen branches

Papi,
are we there—
are we almost there?”
springing up and down
on her
invisible trampoline, Papi’s promises
of a Christmas
tree and celebration in
California, in America…racing
through
her amazed and amazing mind.
Papi was proud. His back
burned and
ached. He clenched his teeth, when she
dozed off to
sleep. His stomach growled,
rattling sunken sides. He went
without
eating so her belly would be full. He took
tiny swigs
of water so she’d have enough…

(Football
fans who love players that ‘play

through
pain;’ Basketball fans who love
players that ‘create their own
shots,’ does
chasing dreams thousands of miles
through
government/gang infested swamps—bad back
7 yr. old in
tow—show up in your thicket of
statistics and fantasy?)

Papi,
are we there—
are we almost there?”
To her the bumpy ride
jarring dreams,
juggling her belly up and down was an
Adventure.
And Papi had prepared her for
it with bedtime stories where
everyone lived
Happily ever after…

Arriving
at a ‘border’ swarming with
uniformed thugs: 3/5
human—igloos
pumping raw sewage through veins
whistling
“Dixie” prying Papi and “J-Bird”
Apart.
Her forehead a
105 degree radiator; body
spasming, eyes rolling ‘round in their
sockets
tummy evicting food Papi fed her—
Terrorist tricks to
breach the border, enter the
U.S.— as were delirious, distorted,
slow motion
Last words…
“Papi, are we there—
are we
almost there?”

©
2018. Raymond Nat Turner, The Town Crier. All Rights Reserved.

Waiting
on Capitalist Hill…

Trumpeted
Blue Wave Bar & Grill, at the foot of
Capitalist Hill
Hearty
meals for labor’s dime, truncated time…
Heard ads, read rave
reviews, received frenzied
phone calls from friends touting
Single-Payer
Pasta to die for; delicious Grilled Green New
Deal
and Gluten Free Education; otherworldly
Affordable Housing Hors
d’oeuvres—and taste
of the hereafter Impeachment Cobbler!

Could
this be true—another case of deja vu—
frowning Maître D;
hearing throat-clearing?
“Hmm…” our reservation… can’t
be found?
Finally seated besides swinging doors—pots,
pans,
plates, ‘talk’ show banter serenading us…
Until a mummified
moll appears hands on hips,
hissing, “You order antipasti?
Fresh
out, hon’—how ‘bout a heaping helping of
Unca Jim?”
Presto! A servile, overbearing Black
server’s at our throats and
1% boots…
They mock our orders in shrill unison and
high-five:
“Off the table! Off the table! Off the table! Off the
table!”

We
shout, “What do you fuckin’ serve?” They shoot back,
“You
knew the menu—you knew what we do—Order up!
Pentagon Cooked
Books on Endless War Endive; War-
Profiteer Pork Chops with
Dictator du Jour Soup; Apartheid
State Steak,White Phosphorus
Seared; Blackened Bailout on
Toasted Too Big To Fail Flatbread;
Order up! Wall Street Stew,
some sweet nothings too? 1% Pineapple
Upside Down Cake?
Flip-the-House Flan with Trickle Down Tea? Hey,
take it or
leave it, hon’…
Or, talk to the bosses: Tony
Missiles, Jake Greasy Thumb
Oil, Al Big Ag, Bugsy Big Pharma,
Crazy Joe Protection…”

©
2018. Raymond Nat Turner, The Town Crier. All Rights Reserved.
Our
poet in residence Raymond Nat Turner is an acclaimed performing
articst. Find much more of his work at 
http://upsurgejazz.com.

Duizenden ‘illegale’ kinderen in VS concentratiekampen…….

Hoewel
de Trump administratie keer op keer stelt dat de kinderen die van hun
ouders werden afgenomen, terug zijn bij hun ouders, blijkt dit ‘evenzovaak’ een leugen te zijn, maar het hieronder opgenomen artikel
overgenomen van Greed en eerder gebracht door Sputnik (VS)
is eigenlijk nog veel sterker verontrustend…..

Het
blijkt dat de VS duizenden kinderen, die zonder hun ouders en papieren de VS binnenkwamen vanuit Mexico en de rest van Midden-Amerika, vasthoudt in
wat niet anders kan worden aangeduid dan concentratiekampen…….. Je kan dan ook gerust spreken van een enorme schending van mensen- en kinderrechten…. 

Vergeet naast dit alles niet dat in het grootste deel van Latijns-Amerika het leven van een kind niets waard is en de VS er zelf voor zorgt het grootste deel van de volkeren in dit deel van de Amerika’s, in diepe armoede zitten, ofwel: de VS is zelf verantwoordelijk voor het vluchten van mensen naar de VS…….

Lees
het volgende artikel en huiver:

THOUSANDS
OF UNDOCUMENTED CHILDREN KEPT IN ‘MODERN-DAY CONCENTRATION CAMPS’

Immigrant Camps

SEPTEMBER
14, 2018
 FRIENDS
OF GREED 3
DHSICEIMMIGRANT
CHILDREN
IMMIGRANT
DETENTION
,IMMIGRATIONSPUTNIKTRUMP

United
States (
Sputnik)
– 
Although
hundreds of children were previously released to their families after
being separated by US federal agents earlier this year, data recently
obtained by The New York Times this week revealed that some 12,800
others are still being held in detention centers.

It
should be noted that the large amount of detainees isn’t due
to an influx in migrant children; rather it’s the result
of fewer children being released into the custody
of guardians or sponsors.

LET
OP: OP DEZE PLEK KAN JE IN HET ORIGINEEL EEN FRAGMENT VAN EEN RADIO UITZENDING (11 MINUTEN) TERUGLUISTEREN, HIER DE LINK

Juan
José Gutiérrez, the executive director of the Full Rights
for Immigrants Coalition (FRIC VS), told 
Radio
Sputnik’s Loud & Clear
 on Thursday
that a majority of those being detained are teenagers
from Mexico and Central America who traveled unaccompanied.

These
individuals are not being picked up by family, friends or
relatives or any kind of sponsor willing to sponsor
children, because the [US President] Donald Trump administration is
making it harder and harder under this zero tolerance
immigration policy for people to step forward and be able
to sponsor these children and get them out of detention,”
he told hosts Brian Becker and John Kiriakou.

What
we have here is that all these children are being kept in these
modern-day concentration camps called immigration shelters,” he
added, before noting that owners of the shelters are making
a profit off of others’ suffering.”

The
Trump administration issued a new rule in June that states
sponsors must be fingerprinted in order to have a child
released into their care, and that their information has to then
be shared with immigration officials.

Children
are being kept in dozens of shelters scattered
throughout the US as their individual cases travel
through the US court system at a snail’s space. On
Tuesday, it was reported that a tent city for migrant boys
in Tornillo, Texas, would stay open until at least the end
of 2019, marking the third time the temporary shelter saw its
closure delayed.

Kenneth
Wolfe, a Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) spokesperson,
told CBS News Tuesday that the compound would be expanding in order
to accommodate some 3,800 additional beds. Though the facility
originally held some 400 boys when it opened on June 14, 2018,
it currently has the means to house 1,200 kids.

Acknowledging
that owners of the private detention camps are lining their
pockets with dollar bills, Gutiérrez told Kiriakou that “this
is [being done] in the nature of capitalism, the so-called
free enterprise system, where you always put profits before people’s
rights and their needs.”

In
this case it is profits before the rights of undocumented
teenagers,” he said.

Reports
surfaced earlier this week that the Trump administration had diverted
some $10 million from several agencies, including the US Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), to fund the US Immigration
and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE). This was in addition
to the $200 million that the Trump administration redirected
from the Department of Homeland Security to ICE
over the summer. Of the $200 million, $93 million was allocated
for detention centers.

This
report prepared by 
Sputnik

=====================================

Kortom eens te meer is duidelijk dat de VS niet alleen in het buitenland grootschalige terreur uitoefent, maar ook in eigen land…….

Zie ook:

13.000 kinderen van vluchtelingen zitten gevangen in VS ‘detentiekampen’

Peuter vluchtelingen moeten eigen zaak bepleiten in VS rechtszalen, de VS: het land van de ‘ongekende mogelijkheden….’

VS martelt gevluchte kinderen…..

VS sluit zelfs kinderen van 10 jaar op….. Met dat land onderhoudt Nederland hechte banden, een rechteloos land waaraan ‘we’ zelfs mensen uitleveren…..

Met nieuw VS ‘vluchtelingenbeleid’ zullen nog meer kinderen seksueel misbruikt worden…..

A Grandmother Seeking Asylum Separated From Disabled Grandson at the Border. It’s Been 10 Months

Children Drugged, Given Forced Injections at Texas Detention Facility: Lawsuit

Pentagon Accepts Trump’s Call to House 20,000 Children on US Military Bases

VS wil van 3.000 migrantenkinderen DNA afnemen om zo de ouders op te sporen…..

De VS heeft een lange geschiedenis in het ontvoeren van kinderen uit niet witte families…….

Jeff Sessions: ‘asielzoekers zijn alleen welkom in de VS als ze kunnen bewijzen dat ze overleden zijn t.g.v. geweld……….’

Immigrants& Muslims Are Trump’s Jews … Until He Comes for theActual Jews (van Harvey Wasserman)

Concentratiekampen in VS voor migranten…….

Concentratiekampen in VS voor migranten…….

Het Vierde Rijk timmert onder Trump nog harder aan de fascistische weg dan onder Obama en Bush….. E.e.a. blijkt bijvoorbeeld uit de barbaarse omgang met vluchtelingen, waar men zelfs kinderen van hun ouders afnam en deze samen met jongeren die op eigen gelegenheid dan wel onder begeleiding van een volwassene (veelal familie) opsloot in ‘jongerencentra’, ofwel gevangenissen die  het best te vergelijken zijn met concentratiekampen (een uitvinding van de Britten)……

Bij concentratiekampen denkt men meteen aan de doodskampen van nazi-Duitsland, echter concentratiekampen werden al veel eerder gebruikt door westerse regeringen en zijn zoals gezegd een Britse uitvinding uit de 19de eeuw……. Door WOII spreekt men liever niet meer over concentratiekampen, maar dat wil niet zeggen dat ze niet meer bestaan, zo bewijst o.a. de VS weer……

Concentratiekampen in de VS zijn niets nieuws, zo sloot men tijdens WOII VS burgers van Japanse en Duitse afkomst op in concentratiekampen, iets waar Trump over zei dat hij zich wat betreft de Japanners wel voor kon stellen iets dergelijks te hebben gedaan, ‘oorlogen zijn nu eenmaal hard….’ (waar hem, zo te zien in het hieronder opgenomen artikel, niet de VS burgers van Duitse komaf werden voorgelegd als voorbeeld, deze komen in het artikel niet eens ter sprake)

Echter met de vinger naar Trump wijzen doet ons vergeten dat bijvoorbeeld Obama 3 miljoen immigranten
deporteerde… (hiervoor kreeg hij de naam: ‘deporter in chief’) Al onder Clinton werden de eerste aanzetten gedaan tot het beleid zoals we dat de laatste jaren hebben gezien…

Kinderen zullen niet meer worden afgenomen van ouders, zo sprak het beest Trump, maar verder verandert er weinig, de concentratiekampen blijven bestaan voor kinderen van wie de ouders niet in de VS zijn……. Zoals het zich laat aanzien krijgen deze kinderen geen rechtsbijstand en blijven ze opgesloten in wat concentratiekampen zijn…… De families die de VS binnenkomen en die worden gepakt, worden in het geheel opgesloten, inclusief peuters en baby’s…… Niet dat ze misdaden hebben begaan, maar omdat ze ‘illegaal’ het land zijn binnengekomen….. (hoe kan je als mens in godsnaam illegaal zijn op onze kleine aarde???)

In het volgende artikel van Elliot Gabriel wijst deze op de VS invloed in Mexico tijdens de 80er
en 90er jaren >> via de Wereldhandelsorganisatie (WTO) heeft de VS in feite de arbeidersbevolking aan de
bedelstaf gebracht……… Ook verdragen als NAFTA bracht het arme deel van bevolkingen in Midden- (en Zuid-) Amerika vooral veel financiële ellende, ellende waardoor velen uiteindelijk zelfs hun land ontvluchtten richting VS….

Het meest smerige is wel dat Trump, plus een groot deel van de republikeinen en democraten durven te zeggen dat de migranten VS burgers hun banen afnemen…… Terwijl nu juist de grote bedrijven hun fabrieken verplaatsten naar landen in Azië en Midden-Amerika (m.n. naar Mexico) en zij daarmee de verantwoordelijken zijn voor de grote werkloosheid onder het arme deel van de VS bevolking……

Arme mensen die nu bespeeld worden door fascisten als Trump met leugens die hen moeten opzetten tegen migranten, die godbetert maar al te vaak vluchten voor door de VS aangerichte ellende in hun thuisland (neem de totaal mislukte ‘War on Drugs’ die in Mexico bijkans een oorlog van de drugsmaffia tegen de bevolking heeft veroorzaakt….. Mensen die dat geweld ontvluchten zijn niet langer welkom, zo liet opperschoft Sessions afgelopen week weten*)

Trump gaat zover met zijn angst en haatzaaierij, dat hij migranten beesten noemt die de VS komen ruïneren…… Hitler en Goebbels zouden trots zijn geweest op zo’n ijverige leerling……..

Yes,
US Immigration Prisons Are Absolutely ‘Concentration Camps’


June
22, 2018 at 9:45 am

Written by Elliott
Gabriel

(MPN
The ongoing furor over a drastic increase in the mass confinement of
migrant families and children has forced people in the United States
to cast a hard look at the immigration enforcement regime that has
aggressively developed in recent years.

The
discussion is increasingly recasting immigrant detention centers as
U.S. concentration camps. This has brought questions
of justice, human and civil rights back into focus — in contrast to
the Trump administration’s narrow reliance on the question of
law-and-order.

Prisons
for detained migrants conform to the basic, literal meaning of a
concentration camp: these are security enclosures where masses of
people from a targeted community are isolated from the general
population and subject to confinement, usually for political
purposes. Deprived of liberty, legal protections, or medical care,
those incarcerated in such camps see their lives reduced to a basic
biological existence.

Sexual
abuse, physical punishment, psychological trauma and even the
 forced
injection of children
 with
drugs are the daily reality for those captured at the border by U.S.
Customs and Border Protection officers or abducted from their homes
and workplaces by the Department of Homeland Security – Immigration
and Customs Enforcement, or DHS-ICE.

While
the term concentration camp is often
dismissed as extreme or exaggerated given its connotation of
Nazi Konzentrationslager like Auschwitz or Dachau —
which could more accurately be called death camps or forced
enslavement camps
 — concentration camps were widely used
by Western governments throughout the early 20th century as a
means to cope with insurgent populations in the colonies and waves of
migrants fleeing war in Europe.

Now,
in the 21st century, the U.S. immigrant enforcement regime has
assumed monstrous proportions. The country is being progressively
enveloped in a steel-clad mesh of stringent bureaucracy and inhumane
facilities devoted to legalized violence toward immigrants —
naturally, this has come in the name of security, sovereignty, and
enforcing the law.

Euphemisms,
Lies, and Mass Confinement

Like
the fig-leaf covering Adam and Eve’s genitals in Renaissance
paintings, a euphemism is a word or phrase meant to hide the true
nature of something considered embarrassing or offensive. Euphemisms
are common in our social interactions: We’re sleeping together; I’m
visiting the water closet; he passed away; we’re downsizing the
staff.

For
politicians, euphemisms are the bread and butter of “talking-points”
(propaganda) and serve to shield the state from public scrutiny and
criticism. Authorities will describe repressive police state measures
as necessary to 
public
safety, 
while
the elimination of public services is called 
balancing
the budget.
 Likewise, militaries
will refer to a blatantly imperialist war as a “
humanitarian
intervention,” 
while
an indiscriminate bombing 
campaign and
capture of enemy-held territory is an act of “
liberation.”

In
the world of criminal justice, solitary confinement and total
isolation from human contact — a form of torture – takes place in
the Security Housing Unit (SHU), a phrase that almost sounds like a
type of condominium apartment.

Immigration-related
U.S. concentration camps come in different varieties, each with its
own preferred euphemisms: there are 
detention
centers
 for
adults,
 childcare
facilities
 for
young children ripped from their families; and for those incarcerated
migrant adults (usually women) fortunate enough to remain with their
children, there are
 Family
Residential Centers
 –
a cheerful term that makes it sound as if families are having a
therapeutic retreat at Club Med rather than facing incarceration.

The
Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma, Washington, provides a good
example of the concentration camps operated by the commercial prison
corporation, GEO Group. Immigrant detainees who went on hunger strike
last year describe the facility as riddled with filthy, exploitative
and abusive conditions. Incarcerated migrants are given cheap,
poor-quality food while being forced to wear soiled underwear.
Medical care access is restricted and often administered by
unqualified prison guards themselves; it’s not uncommon that
prisoners die from treatable diseases like staph infection,
pneumonia, or diabetes.

Those
confined to such camps “temporarily” spend much of their time
with no light at the end of the tunnel, as immigration court
proceedings face repeated delays without explanation. Forced to
languish in horrendous conditions for an indefinite period, prisoners
inevitably fall into a state of deep despondency that sometimes leads
to suicide. In other cases, prisoners who wage hunger strikes face
punitive detention and physical abuse. Prisoners are also expected to
take part in manual labor tasks, where they are paid $1 per hour to
take care of the upkeep of the facilities, drawing comparisons to
enslaved prison labor.

At
“childcare facilities,” young children ripped from their
families’ arms are kenneled in wire-cage compounds or encamped in
overcrowded former Wal-Marts where they are subject to 22-hour
lockdown and given only two hours of fresh air — effectively
amounting to conditions of punitive incarceration for children as
young as seven years old.

Even
toddlers under the age of five have been placed in
three
 so-called “tender
age shelters” located in Texas, with a fourth compound planned for
Houston at a former warehouse slated to be re-purposed into a
“permanent unaccompanied alien children program facility. ”During
the  Second World War, the government vocabulary was riddled
with similarly clean, bureaucratic euphemisms that obscured the
persecution of a community seen as a hostile and inherently “alien”
minority: Japanese immigrants and Japanese-descended citizens of the
U.S.

The
Wartime Precedent: Japanese-American Incarceration

On
February 19, 1942, long-seething anti-Asian racism and the Imperial
Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor culminated in the signing of
Executive Order 9066 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The order
gave xenophobia the seal of approval as official state policy and
decreed the “evacuation” or forced removal of 120,000 U.S.
residents of Japanese ancestry from their homes. Over two-thirds of
those impacted were U.S. citizens, including children.

The
mass incarceration of Japanese-descended families was justified on
the basis of a fear of sabotage by a yet-to-be-exposed “fifth
column,” as well as claims by military authorities that Justice
Department investigations were unable to keep pace with wartime
national-security needs. However, Depression-era white farmers also
saw Japanese Americans as a threat to their economic interests and
had clamored for stripping citizenship from the “Japs.”

apanese
immigrants and Japanese Americans were detained and placed in
assembly centers (temporary detention centers) and relocation
centers, which were at the time depicted as akin to “summer camps.”
In reality, these were concentration camps in the middle of harsh
desert climates, which were surrounded by guard towers and
barbed-wire fences, where Japanese-descended prisoners were overseen
and routinely abused by U.S. Army personnel equipped with machine
guns and even tanks.

By
January 2, 1945, the camps were closed; not a single incarcerated
Japanese had been successfully prosecuted as a spy or agent of the
Japanese government. Yet thousands of

Japanese
Americans incarcerated at the notorious Tule Lake Segregation Center
in California had already been coerced into renouncing their U.S.
citizenship, and were subsequently deported en masse back
to a Japan that was shattered by war.

Descendants
of incarcerated Japanese citizens and immigrants have struggled hard
in recent years to ensure that wartime mass-confinement is described
in terms that accurately reflect the unjust nature of their
experience. In 2013, the Japanese American Community League responded
to criticism over the use of the term “concentration camp,”
stating:

Misleading
government euphemisms like relocation camp, assembly center,
and internment camp
 should no longer be an insurmountable
obstacle to understanding. Ridiculous notions that we were being
protected or pampered will diminish.

Honest
terms like American concentration camp, incarceration camp,
illegal detention center, forced removal
, and others, can now
truthfully tell a story: How the government used language to cover up
the denial of constitutional rights, the racism, forced removal,
incarceration, and oppressive conditions directed against 120,000
innocent people of Japanese ancestry.”

By
2015, Republican then-candidate Donald Trump began floating the idea
of a database of Muslim Americans to prevent, “until we are able to
determine and understand,” the alleged threat of “horrendous
attacks by people that believe only in Jihad.”

When
asked if he would have supported the wartime incarceration of
Japanese Americans, the former reality-TV star answered that it may
have been an option he would have favored. He also suggested that the
concentration camps may have played a role in the U.S. victory over
Japan. Trump explained:

I
would have had to be there at the time to tell you, to give you a
proper answer … It’s a tough thing. It’s tough..  But you
know war is tough. And winning is tough. We don’t win anymore. We
don’t win wars anymore. We don’t win wars anymore. We’re not a
strong country anymore. We’re just so off.”

90s
Roots: White “Nativist” Anxiety and the Neoliberal Offensive

Aside
from the deeply racist, white-supremacist roots of the United States
as a whole, Trump-style xenophobia and anti-immigrant racism became a
major phenomenon in the 1990s, when mass-media outlets and right-wing
politicians filled Americans’ heads with lurid tales of the threat
posed by brown-skinned foreigners. War and terrorism in the Middle
East flooded headlines as the Gulf War in Iraq and resistance to
Israel in Palestine and Lebanon raged.

Meanwhile,
at the southern U.S. border, tens of thousands of Mexican migrants
poured through as a result of the desperate conditions and economic
chaos unleashed by the North American Free Trade Agreement of 1994
and previous neoliberal policies foisted on pliant Mexican
governments by the World Trade Organization (WTO). NAFTA led to a
major influx of investment in Mexico by Canadian and U.S.-based
multinationals, yet the net effect was the plundering of the
country’s resources and wealth, the devastation of its agricultural
sector and rural regions, and a huge uptick in unemployment and
poverty in the country.

As
scholar Richard D. Vogel wrote in his 2007
meticulously-researched 
essayTransient
Servitude
:

U.S.
financial and political intervention in the national life of Mexico
during the 1980s and 1990s, often carried out through the WTO, has
pauperized the Mexican working class. It is they who have had to
suffer the brunt of the mandatory austerity programs, strict debt
restructuring, and privatization initiatives that were imposed on
Mexico in the 1980s after the credit binge of the Mexican bourgeoisie
during the previous decade. The result of this foreign intervention
has been widespread unemployment and displacement from the land that
has produced onerous hardship and sparked internal migration from the
interior of Mexico to the industrialized border region and to the
United States.”

Unauthorized
migration from Mexico became a driving force for nativist resentment
and racism among white workers, resulting in a push for
anti-immigrant laws like California’s Proposition 187 ballot
initiative in 1994. White workers found convenient scapegoats in the
Mexican undocumented workforce, despite the fact that it was U.S.
capitalism as a whole that had undercut their jobs and living
standards through the search for cheap labor in Mexico and other
offshore locations.

The
U.S. responded to the nativist clamor by militarizing the U.S. border
— resulting in the deaths of thousands of border-crossers who died
in the harsh frontier climate — and by conducting showy Border
Patrol operations and raids such as 1993’s Hold the Line in
San Diego and 1995’s Operation Gatekeeper in El
Paso, which did little to stem the flow of migrants.

However,
the generally lax open border policy provided employers and
corporations with access to a huge pool of cheap labor to tap into,
handsomely benefiting a then-booming U.S. economy. By 2005, about 12
million undocumented migrants — over half of whom were Mexican —
resided in the United States.

The
2006 implementation of the U.S.-Central America Free Trade Agreement
(CAFTA, now CAFTA-DR) had a similarly negative impact on development
in Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Honduras, and Nicaragua, whose governments each signed. Rural
migrants were displaced and found no employment in cities, fueling
the growth of organized crime and acting as a sharp push factor for
migration to Mexico and the United States.

Subsequent
administrations’ security agreements with right-wing governments
and imperialist meddling — such as the Obama-Clinton State
Department’s success in overthrowing left-populist Honduran
President Manuel Zelaya in June 2009 — further 
exacerbated the
instability and misery plaguing Central America, creating
an 
inexorable
current
 that
continues to tens of thousands of desperate migrants to the doorstep
of the southern U.S. border in their life-or-death bid for asylum.

Fortress
America” and the Bipartisan Construction of DHS-ICE

The
double standards inherent in U.S. partisan politics have led some to
believe that concentration camps were reintroduced on such a broad
scale under Trump, when in fact the mass confinement of
asylum-seekers and non-citizens was a daily reality under the
administrations of both George W. Bush and Barack Obama, who both
oversaw the expansion of the sprawling DHS machinery.

Indeed,
ever since the Clinton administration’s 1996 Immigration Act, minor
misdemeanor convictions are enough reason for even legal permanent
residents to be deported.

This
history is often ignored by liberal critics of the Trump regime,
owing in no small part to his absolute disregard for the
multicultural sensitivities of his predecessors who built the
immigration enforcement apparatus. The president has no qualms about
resorting to blatantly dehumanizing rhetoric when describing whole
categories of asylum-seekers as “animals” that are “infesting”
the United States, drawing comparisons between the right-wing U.S.
leader’s political ideology and that of Nazi Germany.

Yet
Trump is merely picking up the baton that was passed to him, albeit
with a relish that appears to be both calculating and visceral.

After
September 11, 2001, the U.S. was pushed over the brink by hysteria
over the fear of another spectacular terrorist attack. Muslim
Americans and immigrant communities from Asia, Africa and the Middle
East became the target not only of racist attacks on the streets, but
also of anti-terrorism bills like the USA PATRIOT Act. The act
significantly widened the ability of immigration agents to conduct
mass-detention sweeps of terrorism suspects, while allowing for the
mandatory detention of non-citizens suspected of terrorism for up to
48 hours after arrest.

In
2003, the PATRIOT Act was followed by the establishment of the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which consisted of three
separate bureaus: Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Customs
and Border Protection (CBP), and Citizen and Immigration Services
(CIS). ICE began to extend its facilities, field offices and subfield
offices across the country.

In
June, 2003, ICE introduced its 10-year strategic enforcement plan,
Operation ENDGAME. The plan
 called
for
 information
sharing across government agencies while also explicitly calling for
the forcible removal of the entire unauthorized migrant population of
12 million people from the United States by 2014. In a memorandum
describing the program, ICE Office of Detention and Removal
Operations (DRO) director Anthony Tangemann stated:

DRO
provides the endgame to immigration enforcement and that is the
removal of all removable aliens. This is also the essence of our
mission statement and the ‘golden measure’ to our successes …
We must strive for 100% removal rate.”

Obviously,
the plan was never fulfilled, yet the Obama administration stubbornly
pushed forward in the fortification of ICE as a highly-funded,
fully-staffed and largely unaccountable organization with facilities
and contracted privately-operated concentration camps dotting the
entire country.

While
supporters of Obama will quickly point to his 2013 granting of
temporary relief to non-prioritized unauthorized migrant youth, in
the form of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA),
immigration-rights advocates will be just as quick to point to his
introduction of Secure Communities: A Comprehensive Plan to Identify
and Remove Criminal Aliens (SCOMM).

SCOMM,
which was guided by the goals stipulated in Operation Endgame,
cleared the way for ICE to deport hundreds of thousands of
unauthorized migrants through biometric data-sharing between federal
immigration authorities and thousands of local jails — leading to
the deportation of people convicted of minor crimes such as driving
under the influence or the possession of small amounts of drugs.

SCOMM
was eventually phased out by Obama owing to public pressure, only to
be
 revived by
the Trump administration. Obama’s campaign promises to reform the
U.S. immigration enforcement regime were never fulfilled and instead,
around three million were deported on his watch – earning the
former president the ignominious title “Deporter-In-Chief.”

The
Danger of Ignoring Homeland Security State Cruelty

Amid
the exponential growth of the federal government’s need for jails,
encampments, and kennels for migrant families, immigration-related
concentration camps are increasingly being normalized by an unashamed
Republican Party with Trump as its capo and ideological lodestar.
Even mainstream news hosts like Laura Ingraham of FOX News have
audaciously described incarceration facilities for children as
“essentially summer camps.”

And
on Wednesday — lost in the fanfare of his apparent
family-separation feint — Trump issued an executive order extending
the ability of ICE to incarcerate unauthorized migrants from 20 days
to an indefinite period.

The
United States government has long maintained the largest and most
technologically advanced system of mass confinement in human history.
Over time, a growing component of this system has consisted of new
migrant concentration camp.

It’s
about time that we recognize what led the U.S. to this point and
where that path may lead. Even the most superficial reading of
history reveals how in times of crisis, legal rights taken for
granted as permanent or foundational vanish like a puff of smoke when
security threats and a push to restore “law and order” casts a
dragnet into civilian populations.

In
1973, constitutional scholar Alexander Bickel offered a prescient
criticism of the concept of “citizenship as the tie that binds the
individual to government and [serves] as the source of his rights,”
noting that the right to citizenship can easily be revoked at the
will of the state:

A
relationship between government and the governed that turns on
citizenship can always be dissolved or denied … No matter what
safeguards it may be equipped with, it is at best something that was
given, and given to some and not to others, and it can be taken away.
It has always been easier, it always will be easier, to think of
someone as a noncitizen than to decide that he is a nonperson.”

As
history teaches us, threats to the nation — both external or
internal — can suddenly or gradually change. Today’s
flash-in-the-pan monster at our door might be migrant “animals”
from Latin America, but tomorrow it may take the form of anyone
or any group 
who threatens or disrupts social order — be
it a religious group, a national minority, the swelling homeless
population, the politically non-compliant or any other class of
people criminalized by a government that exclusively caters to the
needs of capital.

Disoriented
by sensationalist propaganda presented as objective news or informed
commentary, U.S. citizens gripped by anxiety and fear eagerly cheer
on the promise of misery for the “alien” as a means to ensure
fortune and safety for the “native.” Blinded by the false pride
found in white supremacy and the nostalgic idyll peddled by Trump and
his cohort, “conservatives” applaud as new walls, “residential
centers” and open-air penitentiaries for “illegals” are
constructed in their hometowns.

Trapped
in a daze of patriotic fervor, supporters of the punitive immigrant
policy regime under Trump remain oblivious to the consequences of
their faith in state violence guided by policies of official bigotry.

And
as for the rest of us, wringing our hands and expressing outrage
alone will get us nowhere in terms of preventing systematic cruelty
and state terror. Instead, we should continue to develop a serious
analysis of the overall situation and organize to defend our basic
rights before the windows of opportunity are bolted shut.

By Elliott
Gabriel
 / Creative
Commons
 / MintPress
News
 / Report
a typo

==============================

Hier nog een video van Brasscheck TV met dezelfde strekking:

CONCENTRATION
CAMPS FOR CHILDREN IN THE US

SOME
SIMPLE FACTS YOU ARE NOT BEING TOLD

THIS
IS A BUSINESS OPERATION

  1. Seeking
    asylum in the US is not a crime. It’s an administrative process.
    After the hearings, the US can always no to the application.

  1. There’s
    absolutely no legal basis to take the children of asylum seekers
    from their parents.

  1. People
    who cross the border illegally and are found not to have criminal
    records used to be returned to the border they crossed. Now they are
    being jailed for six months – at taxpayer expense – and having
    their children taken from them.

  1. The
    revenues for these interments are going to the shareholders of
    PRIVATELY owned prisons.

  1. Privately
    owned Prison companies like GEO and CoreCivic donated nearly
    $500,000 to support Trump’s election campaign and underwrite his
    inauguration.

  1. The
    Trump administration has no procedure in place for reuniting
    children with the parents they have been taken from.

     7.
The government will not disclose where the children they have seized
are being held. Nor               will they allow Congressman or the news media to
enter these facilities.

======================================

* Zie: VS martelt gevluchte kinderen…..

Zie ook:Jeff Sessions: ‘asielzoekers zijn alleen welkom in de VS als ze kunnen bewijzen dat ze overleden zijn t.g.v. geweld……….’

Immigrants& Muslims Are Trump’s Jews … Until He Comes for theActual Jews (van Harvey Wasserman)

VS sluit zelfs kinderen van 10 jaar op….. Met dat land onderhoudt Nederland hechte banden, een rechteloos land waaraan ‘we’ zelfs mensen uitleveren…..

A Grandmother Seeking Asylum Separated From Disabled Grandson at the Border. It’s Been 10 Months

Met nieuw VS ‘vluchtelingenbeleid’ zullen nog meer kinderen seksueel misbruikt worden…..


Children Drugged, Given Forced Injections at Texas Detention Facility: Lawsuit


Pentagon Accepts Trump’s Call to House 20,000 Children on US Military Bases

VS wil van 3.000 migrantenkinderen DNA afnemen om zo de ouders op te sporen…..

De VS heeft een lange geschiedenis in het ontvoeren van kinderen uit niet witte families…….

Nikki Haley (VS ambassadeur bij de VN) UNHRC heeft commentaar op een land met een goede mensenrechten reputatie, t.w. Israël…. ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

Met nieuw VS ‘vluchtelingenbeleid’ zullen nog meer kinderen seksueel worden misbruikt….

De
nieuwe maatregelen tegen migranten en hun kinderen
* zal
voor een enorme toename van misbruik als verkrachtingen bij die
kinderen leiden……

Rond één derde van de kinderen die in de VS tot vluchtelingen
behoren en die vastzitten, is met hun ouders, dan wel een volwassen
begeleider als oom of tante de VS binnengekomen (niet zelden op de vlucht voor de
ellende die de VS in hun thuisland aanricht…)…… 

Sinds kort worden deze kinderen na aanhouding bij hun ouders dan wel begeleider weggehaald en apart gehuisvest in een zogenaamd opvangcentrum, in de praktijk zijn deze centra echter ‘gewoon’ ordinaire gevangenissen, waar die
kinderen 22 uur per dag binnen zitten….. 

Afbeeldingsresultaat voor How Many Children Will Be Raped Due to Trump’s New Policy?

Juist
de ambtenaren van overheidsbureaus of medewerkers van particuliere organisaties die deze jongeren ‘begeleiden’ en de
leiding in deze zogenaamde opvangcentra, misbruiken deze vaak al getraumatiseerde kinderen op grote
schaal….. Het aantal klachten over seksueel misbruik door de
leiding in die gevangenissen is fiks en dat zou volgens deskundigen nog maar
2% zijn van het werkelijke aantal gevallen van kindermisbruik……

Alleen
tussen 2010 en 2016 was het aantal klachten 33.000 ga maar na wat dit
betekent als dit nog maar 2% is van het totale aantal gevallen van misbruik en andere vormen van ernstige geestelijke en lichamelijke mishandeling…… (over dat laatste spreekt schrijver Justin King van het hieronder opgenomen artikel niet, echter dat is voor veel van deze kinderen en andere gevangenen wel de dagelijkse praktijk….)

Ondanks
deze enorme ellende, die bekend moet zijn bij de Trump administratie, is deze maatregel toch ingevoerd, een maatregel waarbij kinderen worden gescheiden van hun ouders…….. Alles ‘in de strijd tegen vluchtelingen’, die zoals
gezegd veelal op de vlucht zijn als gevolg van terroristisch, illegaal VS ingrijpen in
Midden- en Zuid-Amerika…….

Een
regering die dergelijke maatregelen neemt verdient maar één stempel:
fascistisch!!

The Fifth Column (TFC) 12 juni 2018

How
many children will be raped due to Trump’s new policy?

Gerelateerde afbeelding

by Justin
King
 • June
12, 2018

(TFC)
– We’ve seen the images. Children being torn from their
asylum-seeking families. Kids in cages, like animals caught by the
local animal control agency. It’s horrendous, it’s evil, it’s
against everything America is supposed to represent, but there’s an
even larger problem.

The
agencies involved in this debacle are known for raping and sexually
assaulting detainees. Not in isolated incidents, but by the
thousands. That’s not an exaggeration. 
The
Intercept
 obtained
1224 complaints about sexual abuse in ICE custody. That’s
staggering, but according to the Office of the Inspector General
(OIG), that’s 
only
2% of the total number of complaints.

“…officials
with the DHS Office of Inspector General indicated that the office
received some 33,000 complaints between 2010 and 2016 alleging a wide
range of abuses in immigration detention. The OIG provided records
documenting investigations for just 2 percent of the complaints it
shared with The Intercept.”

33,000.
What kind of abuses were mentioned? The allegations in the complaints
are horrific. A male detainee was forced to perform oral sex on a
male immigration officer. A woman was maced and then forced to endure
a male guard pressing his erect penis into her from behind while
other guards watched. Sodomy. A woman raped by a medical worker. It’s
a never-ending barrage of the most heinous crimes imaginable.

Out
of the 1224 complaints obtained, only 43 were investigated by the
OIG. 
Out
of the full 33,000, only 247 were investigated by the OIG
.
That’s less than 1%. No statement by the government on how
widespread the problem is can be trusted because they simply refuse
to even pretend to investigate themselves.

At
an 
immigration
center in Pennsylvania
,
there are handbooks for detainees. The English version clearly states
there is a zero-tolerance policy in regards to sexual assault and
harassment. The Spanish version? It advises women to not talk about
sex so they can avoid being assaulted. In this particular facility,
the only prosecuted case of sexual assault was a government employee
assaulting a teenaged girl. She had fled Honduras to avoid being
raped. The perpetrator was locked up for only five months.

However,
that case was the exception. It was actually prosecuted, most aren’t
even investigated. At a GEO Group-run facility, a female
minor 
reported
a sexual assault
.
A medical exam said she showed indications of vaginal scarring and a
sexually transmitted disease. ICE declared the complaint “unfounded”
even though there was ample physical evidence.

However,
as is a trend with federal agencies, in many cases when a victim
reports the crime, they are 
placed
in solitary confinement.
 A
tactic, immigrants rights groups say, designed to pressure the victim
into withdrawing the complaint.

Remember
that sexual assault 
is
always underreported
.
There are tens of thousands of these cases. Children will be sexually
assaulted as a result of the President’s policy of separating
children from their families. It’s not a question of if children
will be assaulted, but how many. A dozen? Hundreds? A thousand? How
many kids are you ok with being raped? Is your fear of asylum-seekers
so great that you’ll offer up children to predators like some pimp
in a back alley?

Tags: ice immigration Justin
King
 rape sexual
assault

* Zie: ‘VS sluit zelfs kinderen van 10 jaar op….. Met dat land onderhoudt Nederland hechte banden, een rechteloos land waaraan ‘we’ zelfs mensen uitleveren…..

Zie ook:

13.000 kinderen van vluchtelingen zitten gevangen in VS ‘detentiekampen’

Immigrants& Muslims Are Trump’s Jews … Until He Comes for theActual Jews (van Harvey Wasserman)

A Grandmother Seeking Asylum Separated From Disabled Grandson at the Border. It’s Been 10 Months

Jeff Sessions: ‘asielzoekers zijn alleen welkom in de VS als ze kunnen bewijzen dat ze overleden zijn t.g.v. geweld……….’

VS martelt gevluchte kinderen…..

Concentratiekampen in VS voor migranten…….

Peuter vluchtelingen moeten eigen zaak bepleiten in VS rechtszalen, de VS: het land van de ‘ongekende mogelijkheden….’


VS wil van 3.000 migrantenkinderen DNA afnemen om zo de ouders op te sporen…..


De VS heeft een lange geschiedenis in het ontvoeren van kinderen uit niet witte families…….

Children Drugged, Given Forced Injections at Texas Detention Facility: Lawsuit

Pentagon Accepts Trump’s Call to House 20,000 Children on US Military Bases


De kop van dit bericht op 10 juli 2018 veranderd door het woord ‘worden’ te verplaatsen, dit woord was op de mij typische dyslectische manier verwerkt, mijn excuus.

Gezichtsherkenningssoftware in zonnebrillen en zelfs voor het scannen van rijdende auto’s: Big Brother neemt een reuzenstap………

Mensen die stellen dat het een goede zaak is elke minuut van de dag te worden gecontroleerd door de overheid, vragen in feite om een dictator! (en reken maar dat iedereen iets te verbergen heeft, zelfs en vooral de staat, zoals keer op keer blijkt, als ons weer een oor is aangenaaid……..).

Onze privacy is al voor een fiks deel gestolen, dit in de oorlog tegen terrorisme, terwijl de geheime diensten een terrorist zelfs niet kunnen tegenhouden, als ze deze al lang in het vizier hebben……. Reken maar dat ook bij invoering van dergelijke gezichtsherkenningstechnologie men je voor zal houden dat dit van het grootste belang is van jouw eigen veiligheid……

In de VS heeft de Customs and Border Protection (CBP usa) aangekondigd dat het de komende zomer gaat experimenteren met gezichtsherkenningssoftware voor rijdende auto’s, waar men met deze technologie alle passagiers in een auto kan scannen…….

De vervolmaking tot een staat als beschreven in George Orwells 1984, komt steeds dichterbij…. In China heeft men al een zonnebril voor politieagenten ontwikkelt, die ook de gezichten van passanten (en daarmee mensen die staande zijn gehouden) razendsnel kunnen scannen met gezichtsherkenningssoftware………

Met dit soort soft- en hardware zal het steeds moeilijker worden om nog in opstand te komen tegen de huidige inhumane neoliberale status quo….. Nog even en men weet al wat je denkt als je door de stad loopt……. Hitler en z’n misdadige kliek zouden er van kwijlen, elke tegenstander zou in een mum van tijd kunnen worden opgepakt, vastgezet en vermoord………

Derrick Broze stelt in het artikel hieronder dat e.e.a niet meer is tegen te houden en dat de tijd rijp is om gemeenschappen te creëren waar men dit soort technologie afwijst (wat nooit zal worden toegestaan). Echter het lijkt me allesbehalve te laat om massaal in opstand te komen tegen deze totale afbraak van ons recht op privacy en op de inperking van onze ‘vrijheid!!’ (voor zover er nog sprake is van vrijheid…)

US
to Test Facial Recognition Scanners on People in Moving Vehicles

February
6, 2018 at 2:22 pm

Written
by 
Derrick
Broze

(AP) — On
Thursday the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) announced plans for a
new pilot program that will test out biometric facial recognition
technology as part of an effort to identify fugitives or terror
suspects. The 
Austin-American
Statesman
 reported
on the announcement:

Thanks
to quantum leaps in facial recognition technology, especially over
the past year, the future is arriving sooner than most Americans
realize. As early as this summer, CBP will set up a pilot program to
digitally scan the faces of drivers and passengers — while they are
in moving vehicles — at the busy Anzalduas Port of Entry outside of
McAllen, the agency announced Thursday.”

The
Texas-Mexico border is being used as the testing grounds for the
technology. The results of the pilot program will be used to help
roll out a national program along the entire southern and northern
borders. 
The
Statesman
 notes
that the Department of Energy hired researchers at Tennessee’s Oak
Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) to help overcome the difficulties of using
facial recognition technology on moving vehicles. The researchers
developed a method for combating window tinting and sun glare which
can make a vehicle’s windows impenetrable to cameras. The facial
recognition technology being developed for the pilot program will be
capable of identifying the driver, front passengers, and the
passengers riding in the back.

The
CBP currently operates facial recognition exit programs at almost a
dozen international airports in the United States. Colleen Manaher,
the CBP’s executive director of planning, program analysis and
evaluation, told the 
Statesman that
travelers have been accepting of the technology and noted that “we
can thank the Apples and the Googles for that.”

Although
the CBP claims implementing facial recognition technology could
eventually eliminate the need for passports, boarding passes and
other travel documents, the technology is without a doubt an invasion
of privacy. Both the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Georgetown
University’s Center on Privacy and Technology have called for
further investigation into the potential dangers of a massive facial
recognition apparatus. In the U.S., only Texas and Illinois have laws
preventing the use of biometric data for commercial purposes.

The
new Texas pilot program is only the latest effort by the federal
government to implement a wide range of biometric and surveillance
programs around the United States.

In
August 2017 
Activist
Post
 first
reported on the 
plans
to launch a national program scan the faces
of
all airline passengers in the U.S. Customs and Border Protection
launched a “Traveler Verification Service” (TVS) that intends to
use facial recognition on all airline passengers, including U.S.
citizens, boarding flights exiting the United States. That same month
it was 
reported that
thirty-one sheriffs along the U.S.-Mexico border voted unanimously to
adopt tools that will allow the collection and storing of iris scans.

Additionally, Activist
Post
 just
last week 
reported that
the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency now has
access to a nationwide license plate recognition database after
finalizing a contract with the industry’s top license plate data
collection company. This database allows ICE to search a vehicles
whereabouts over the last five years, as well as developing “hot
lists” that can track particular vehicles indefinitely.

The
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is currently 
facing
a lawsuit
 for
failing to release records related to the agency’s use of devices
to gather biometric data from immigrants. Mijente and the National
Immigration Project of National Lawyers Guild (NIPNLG) are asking a federal
court to force ICE and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to release
information related to the use of handheld devices used to gather
biometric data from immigrants during raids.

These
programs are reminiscent of mass surveillance systems established in
Russia and China. The truth of the matter is that all three nations
are taking different paths towards the same goal: control and
monitoring of their population and suppression of critical thought or
opposition. The only way to stand against this is to refuse to fund
the programs at every turn and sharing the information. It might be
too late to stop the establishment of these programs, but the people
could potentially form enough of a resistance to establish free
communities and neighborhoods where these invasive technologies are
rejected.

By Derrick
Broze
 / Republished
with permission / 
Activist
Post
 / Report
a typo


Zie ook:

Israël houdt 24 uur per dag Palestijnen in de gaten met gezichtsherkenningsapparatuur en hulp Microsoft

VS wet geeft regeringen en politie in buitenland de kans in data van burgers te grasduinen, zonder enig verzoek daartoe………

Duitsland begint vandaag proef met gezichtsherkenningssoftware……….

Kinderen worden in VS gevangen gehouden daar gevluchte ouders ‘illegaal zijn……….’

Gisteren ontving ik een dringende oproep van Amnesty in de VS, een petitie te tekenen tegen het opsluiten van kinderen….. Kinderen die samen met hun moeder gevangen zijn gezet daar ze illegaal in de VS zouden zijn.

Deze mensen zijn geen ‘gelukszoekers’ (voor wat die achterlijke term waard is), maar vluchtelingen voor extreem geweld in eigen land……..

Hier de link naar de petitie  Waar u ook de petitiebrief kan lezen (als u uw gegevens invoert moet u bij State‘Outside US‘ aanklikken).


Lees hoe ‘het land van vrijheid en onbegrensde mogelijkheden’, politiestaat VS, omgaat met kinderen en hun vervolgde ouders (Ivanka is de dochter van het beest Trump):


Ivanka:
Tell Your Dad to Stop Putting Little Kids In Jail. #ShutDownBerks


Candles,
birthday cake, presents, friends and family. That’s what every
parent hopes for their child’s birthday. Instead of festivities,
Tomás spent his (eighth) birthday behind bars—for the second year in
a row.


The
reason why? Because Tomás and his mom were jailed in the only place
in the country where you can hold a child who has never committed a
violent crime for over 600 days: Berks Country, PA. Tomás and his
mom, Natalia, are amongst at least 60 other moms, dads, and children
who were locked up after seeking safety here, though they fled
from violence in their home countries.

                       


Together
we can shut down Berks. Take action now.

Today,
we’re calling on Ivanka Trump to join us in the fight for kids
like Tomás. Ivanka campaigned for her father on a commitment to
support kids and mothers—shouldn’t that include all kids—even
the ones at Berks?

Tell
Ivanka to help the kids at Berks.

We
all share a responsibility to help people who have lost everything,
and to give them a chance to rebuild their lives safely the same way
all of us would need to if we were in this horrible
situation.
That’s
why Amnesty International is fighting to ensure that people who fled
to the US seeking safety have a fair shot at it.

A
fair shot never happened for Tomás, whose real name we’re
withholding for his safety. After hundreds of days behind bars—where
he suffered PTSD (posttraumatische stressstoornis: PTSS, Ap) and his weight shrank to just 40 pounds—he and his
mother were deported without ever having a chance to fully make their
case for asylum. They face extreme danger, perhaps even death. We
can’t let that happen again.

Take
action to help the kids at Berks now.

Thank
you for taking action.

Naureen
Shah
Senior
Director of Campaigns
Amnesty
International USA

Hier de link naar de petitie  Waar u ook de petitiebrief kan lezen

Ivanka
Trump campaigned for her father on a commitment to helping kids and
their mothers. But what about the ones who are spending months,
sometimes years, behind bars in Berks County, Pennsylvania, in what’s
known as the “baby jail”? They fled violence and persecution in
countries like Honduras, dreaming of safety in the US. Now these
little kids are being detained, some for half their lives, learning
to walk behind bars. We’re asking Ivanka Trump to show compassion,
and tell her father to #ShutDownBerks. 

Hier de link naar de petitie (als u uw gegevens invoert moet u bij State: ‘Outside US‘ aanklikken).

AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL USA LAUNCHES CAMPAIGN TO FREE YOUNG CHILDREN AND
MOTHERS DETAINED BY ICE FOR OVER 500 DAYS
Amnesty
International USA (AIUSA) is launching a campaign today urging
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to release several families
with young children being detained at the Berks County Residential
Center in Pennsylvania. Four of the 35 children currently detained at
Berks – aged three, four, seven and 16 – have been at the Center
for over 500 days, despite having pending applications for legal
permanent residency.

AIUSA
sent a letter to ICE on March 9 requesting that these families be
granted parole and is mobilizing its over 1.2 million U.S. members
and supporters to call the agency to demand that the families be
released.

These
four children have spent a significant amount of their lives
essentially behind bars. The U.S. cannot continue to treat those
fleeing horrific violence like criminals,” said Margaret Huang,
Amnesty International USA executive director. “These families were
detained under the Obama administration’s unlawful policy of using
detention as deterrence against those fleeing violence and
insecurity. Now, in the face of President Trump’s aggressive and
inhumane immigration orders, we are deeply concerned for these
families and others like them in the U.S. We will fight to ensure
that people with asylum claims are given a fair hearing and humane
treatment.We must do everything we can to ensure protection for
people who are fleeing violence.”

Researchers
from Amnesty International have worked closely with attorneys who
represent the families held in Berks County, one of three family
detention centers operated by the U.S. government. Berks is currently
holding 34 families – 15 of them for more than a year – many of
whom come from a region known as the Northern Triangle which includes
El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. The Northern Triangle is an
area widely recognized for its extreme levels of violence and
insecurity, which Amnesty has also documented extensively.

  • Three-year-old Josué*
    has spent over half his life in detention. He learned to walk and
    talk in confinement. He and his 28-year-old mother 
    Teresa have
    spent 16 months (500 days, and counting) at Berks. Josué and his
    mother fled kidnapping threats, physical and sexual assault in
    Honduras and came to the US seeking asylum. “[My son]…is so
    young, he was only 22 months when we came and now he’s three years
    old,” Teresa said in an interview with her lawyers.

  • Four-year-old Carlos and
    his mother, 34-year-old 
    Lorena,
    fled threats, intimidation and severe and repeated gender-based
    violence in Honduras. They have spent 16 months in detention.

  • Seven-year-old Antonio and
    his mother 
    Marlene,
    24,have one of the longest detention periods at Berks – 550 days
    and counting. Currently in their 18th month of detention,
    Marlene recounts how Antonio has already spent two Christmas in
    detention. “It’s not fair for a child to spend a year and a half
    in prison”, she said, adding that the impact of prolonged
    detention is taking a toll on them. “The psychological effect it
    has on a person, and their kids…we can’t bear it anymore.”

  • At
    age 16, 
    Michael is
    the oldest child at Berks County. He and his 41-year-old
    mother 
    Maribel,
    have been held in detention for nearly 17 months. Michael was
    targeted for gang recruitment in El Salvador and threatened with
    death. Following constant threats to the family, both mother and son
    escaped to the U.S. to seek asylum. Michael wants to be a police
    officer now.

All
four children were granted a Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS)
in late 2016. With SIJS, a state court has determined that it is not
in a minor’s best interest to return to his or her home country
because of abuse, abandonment, or neglect by one or both parents. In
this instance it was determined that these children “were
abandoned, abused, or neglected by [their] father[s]…as such,
[their] mother[s] are now the custodial parent, and responsible for
all decision regarding their court proceedings, custody and care.” 


Therefore, it is essential that the mothers and children be released
together. Three of the children have already been issued their
Employment Authorization Document in January 2017, and one is
awaiting his. 


This enables them to apply for a social security
number. All have pending applications for legal permanent residency.
Further, their mothers have stays of removal granted by the
3rd Circuit Court of Appeals, while they challenge their removal
orders in federal court.

Each
of the four families has an unchallenged sponsor in the United
States, who is ready and willing to take them in, and ensure their
appearance in court. Despite this, their SIJ status, and pending
applications for legal permanent residency, ICE officials refuse to
release these four children and their mothers from detention.

Hier de link naar de petitie  Waar u ook de petitiebrief kan lezen. (als u uw gegevens invoert moet u bij State‘Outside US‘ aanklikken)

================================

Klik voor meer berichten n.a.v. het bovenstaande, op één van de labels, die u hieronder terug kan vinden.

VS razzia’s eisen hun tol: VS burger voor 3 weken vastgezet als ongedocumenteerde immigrant……….

Beste bezoeker, het volgende bericht dateert van begin deze maand en geeft een goed beeld van waar fascistische beleid en inhumane omgang met mensen, toe kan leiden, dit 72 jaar na het eind van WOII……

Op 3 april j.l. bracht Anti-Media het bericht over een VS burger, die onterecht werd vastgehouden als ongedocumenteerde immigrant en alleen daarvoor zonder proces 3 weken lang in een gevangenis zat……

U denkt misschien, dat dit te danken is aan het beleid van het beest Trump, echter ook onder Obama zaten een paar honderd mensen op dezelfde grond onterecht vast…….. Overigens vinden onder Trump nu met grote regelmaat razzia’s plaats. Deze vervolging zorgt ervoor dat restaurants die hoofdzakelijk werden bezocht door ‘illegale immigranten’, meer en meer hun deuren moeten sluiten…….. Dit daar deze immigranten buiten het werk dat ze doen, hun huis niet meer durven te verlaten, waar ze bovendien in angst leven voor de eerder genoemde razzia’s………

2017 mensen, 2017………

Zie ook het bericht onder de rode link in het volgende artikel, de link na NPR (National Public Radio).

U.S.
Citizen Jailed 3 Weeks for Being Suspected Undocumented Immigrant

April
3, 2017 at 9:46 am

Written
by 
Anti-Media
Staf

U.S. Citizen Jailed 3 Weeks for Being Suspected Undocumented Immigrant

(ANTIMEDIA) A
story last week highlights the fact that undocumented people in
America aren’t the only ones affected by Donald Trump’s
immigration crackdown.

On
Friday, 
The
Daily Beast
 reported that
a U.S. citizen is suing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
after being wrongfully held for nearly three weeks.

Rony
Chavez Aguilar, who emigrated from Guatemala in 1991 and became a
naturalized citizen in 2001, says during his incarceration he never
saw a judge and was never even told why he was being detained.

According
to Aguilar’s attorney, Charles Roth, who spoke to The Daily
Beast
, Aguilar was originally arrested in Chicago on drug
charges. After spending two weeks in jail, he thought he had been
released.

Instead,
ICE agents, suspecting he was an undocumented immigrant, showed up
and hauled him down to an ICE facility in Kentucky where other
detainees face deportation. That was March 7.

He
said, ‘Hey, I’m a citizen!’”
 Roth
claims. “And
basically they said, ‘Tell it to the judge.’” 
The
judge Aguilar was never allowed to see.

On
March 27, Roth filed a suit against ICE on the grounds that it was
violating his client’s constitutional rights. The suit alleges,
among other things, that ICE violated Aguilar’s due process by
never explaining to him why he was being held.

Aguilar
was released from detention hours after the suit was filed.

Roth
says his client’s case is far from uncommon, and he hopes to bring
other victims in on the lawsuit. For instance,
an 
NPR investigation last
December found that between 2007 and 2015, nearly 700 U.S. citizens
were thrown in jail illegally at the request of ICE agents.

Creative
Commons
 Anti-Media Report
a typo

================================

Klik voor meer berichten n.a.v. het bovenstaande, op één van de labels, die u onder dit bericht terug kan vinden, dit geldt niet voor de labels: ICE en NPR.