U.S. Immigrant Rights Groups Urge An End to Detentions & Deportations, Cite High Human Cost to Immigrant Families
For Immediate Release
December 15, 2011
Contact:
Colin Rajah 510-465-1984 ext. 306
Laura Rivas 510-465-1984 ext. 304
On International Migrants Day, December 18
U.S. Immigrant Rights Groups Urge An End to Detentions & Deportations, Cite High Human Cost to Immigrant Families
(Oakland, CA) As we approach International
Migrants Day (December 18), U.S. immigrant rights groups urge the U.S.
government to take immediate measures to end the detention and deportation of
immigrant women, men and children, and its subsequent high human cost.
2011 marked a record year of deportations, coupled with
ongoing detentions that separate and destabilize families and undermine community
health, most recently highlighted by the DOJ's scathing report of
Maricopa County's systemic human rights violations and DHS's decision to
suspend 287(g) in the county.
“Despite the Obama Administration’s claims that
they are only deporting so-called dangerous criminals, we witnessed the most
deportations ever in the history of the U.S., including a record number
of un-accompanied
minors and long-term residents who are prosecuted
for illegal re-entry,” declared Catherine Tactaquin, Executive Director of
the National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (NNIRR). “Until there is
an end to these punitive enforcement programs and practices, and concrete steps
are taken toward durable solutions to regularize the status of undocumented
immigrants, our communities will experience another generation of oppression
and hardship.”
Earlier this year, NNIRR released a human rights report, Injustice for All: Rise of the Immigration Control Regime,which
documented long-standing human rights abuses through existing policies and
practices, such as “Secure Communities,” that result in the vile persecution of
immigrant families, workers and communities.
“The recent ICE raid at Shogun Buffet,
an Asheville restaurant, resulting in the detention and possible deportation of
a dozen immigrant workers shows the Obama Administration’s strategy of ‘smart
enforcement’ is more of the same under the Bush Administration. It is shameful
that the Administration continues these punitive policies that crush families,
tear parents away from their children, and subject them to emotional and
physical trauma,” stated Laura Rivas, co-author of the report. “Every day
this year, the U.S. commits grave human rights violations. By criminalizing an
entire class of people due to their immigration status, perceived or real, our
government has also made them more vulnerable to abuse, discrimination and
economic exploitation.”
As this year’s International Migrants Day comes on
the heels of the 5th Global Forum on Migration and Development (GFMD) in
Geneva, Switzerland, NNIRR called attention for global governance to respond to
the human rights crisis facing migrants around the world.
“The U.S. has now
taken leadership within the GFMD process,” commented Colin Rajah of Migrants
Rights International (MRI), which has been organizing parallel
civil society forums and actions in conjunction to the GFMD,
“But after half a decade of dialogue, it is time for action as we witness
ever-worsening conditions for migrants around the globe. We urge the U.S. to
set an example with relief for undocumented immigrants from persecution within
the U.S. And the U.S. can play a stronger role in shaping global governance to
protect the human rights of all migrants, regardless of status or their
perceived economic value to a country.”
Celebrate
International Migrants Day,
Ratify
the Migrant Workers’ Convention
International Migrants Day was recognized by the
United Nations in 2000 to commemorate the passage of the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights
of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families (commonly
referred to as the Migrant Workers’ Convention) on December 18, 1990.
NNIRR is renewing its call to the U.S. to ratify
this critical Convention and commit to ending punitive enforcement policies and
practices.
NNIRR is also joining a global day
of action against racism and for the rights of migrants,
refugees and displaced people, in which dozens of actions are being taken up
around the world.
Immigrant community groups around the U.S. are
also marking International Migrants Day with marches, press conferences, candlelight
vigils, cultural events, art-exhibits, film-screenings in cities such as
Honolulu, HI; Tucson, AZ; Oakland, CA; Chicago, IL; Asheville, NC; and New
York, NY.
To view a partial list of
events as well as details and contact information, click here.
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