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Immigration: There's a Human Rights Crisis Within Our Borders

Posted by Jill Garvey, Imagine 2050 at 4:47 PM on November 2, 2009.


Perhaps the best guide as our nation traverses immigration reform is to demand that every immigrant, refugee, and citizen is treated as a human being.

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Treatment of immigrant detainees tells of the shameless brokenness of America’s immigration system. Even the valiant efforts by some to lessen the suffering of families caught in the immigration web are stymied by the lack of rational immigration reform.


Recent articles have highlighted the issue. In Nina Bernstein’s recent New York Times article, In Manhattan, Immigrant Jail Draws Scrutiny, she discusses the Varick Street Detention Facility in Manhattan.

The new focus on Varick highlights the conflict between two forces: the administration’s plans to revamp detention, and current policies that feed the flow of detainees through the system as it is now. A disjointed mix of county jails and privately run prisons, where mistreatment and medical neglect have been widely documented, the detention network churns roughly 400,000 detainees through 32,000 beds each year.

“Any attempt to get support or services for them is stymied because you don’t know where they’re going to end up,” said Lynn M. Kelly, the director of the Justice Center.

When she asked that the lawyers’ letters of legal advice be forwarded to detainees who had been transferred from Varick, she said the warden balked, saying he had to consider the financial interests of his private shareholders: 1,200 members of a central Alaskan tribe whose dividends are linked to Varick’s profits under a $79 million, three-year federal contract.

Arlene M. Roberts wrote last month about how corporate interests are superseding humane treatment of immigrants in The Detention Debacle: Toward Reform with Civility.

No discussion of detention reform can be complete without addressing the establishment of a uniform standard of accountability.

Across the nation detention facilities are run by private companies that are not held accountable for what transpires within the confines of their facilities. As a result, former detainees recount tales of horror and abuse.

Perhaps the best guide as our nation traverses immigration reform is to demand that every immigrant, refugee, and citizen is treated as a human being.

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Tagged as: immigration, human rights, detentions

Jill Garvey is a regular contributor to Imagine2050.


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these are not immigrants
Posted by: sharonsylvie on Nov 3, 2009 6:38 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please use the correct term. Most of these people are illegal aliens. They came across our borders illegally, perhaps with forged documents. They live here illegally and take low-paying jobs with no benefits--great for the employer but lousy for the citizen who now can't find a decent job. Perhaps they pay taxes, but who's to know for sure. We don't even know how many there are: 10 million or 20 million? We do know that they use our schools, hospitals and prisons, and we foot most of the bills. I may not like the way they are treated when caught, but they need to be deported.

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Here is a novel idea
Posted by: Durendal55 on Nov 3, 2009 8:01 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Instead of endlessly complaining about how terrible private prisons are and trying to use it as a wedge to give amnesty to Illegal Aliens (USCIS approved term) why don't you and your friends pool your money and open your own private prison and do it the way you think it should be done. Or better yet, buy all the private prisons, and run them they way you think they should be run. “Any fool can criticize, condemn and complain and most fools do.” “Well done is better than well said.” - Benjamin Franklin

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Expedited Removal
Posted by: DAD77 on Nov 3, 2009 4:46 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Under Expedited Removal, aliens who present no claim for asylum or other protection are removed under streamlined processes, which reduce both the period of time such aliens are detained and the enforcement resources necessary to secure orders of removal.

While the average length of detention for aliens in traditional removal proceedings is 89 days, the length of detention for aliens removed under Expedited Removal processing is 19 days. – Dept. of Homeland Security.

Volunteer today and quit waiting for Obama to change the law. It's not going to happen.

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All of the above
Posted by: DaBear on Nov 4, 2009 9:18 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The previous three comments confirm my long-held suspicion that the average 'Merkaaner is too stupid to evaluate and assess a problem then form an intelligent solution.

Reminds me of the line in "48 Hours" when Eddie Murphy's character is shaking down a bunch of rednecks in a cowboy bar and pulls a wad of cash from a guy's pocket and asks where he got that kind of money... cowboy: "tax refund." Eddie's character: "Bullshit, you're too stupid to have a job." The idiots responding above are kinda like that cowboy.

The far simpler solution is to follow the lead the article eludes to: change the entire approach to "immigration" to one based on human rights rather than assininity like the views upthread, belched forth by the unwashed and the inhumane.

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» RE: All of the above Posted by: Durendal55