Author: mopress

  • Archive: Statesman's Castillo Makes Up for Lost Coverage

    He was among the first reporters to be notified of the plight of immigrant families at T. Don Hutto prision camp in Taylor, Texas. At last, his editors appear to have given him permission to give the story the coverage it deserves, perhaps because a federal judge last week expressed exasperation in open court. Below are the first few paragraphs of a comprehensive overview posted Sunday morning at statesman.com (subscription).–gm

    Familial bonds

    Is government’s policy to detain immigrant families fair?

    By Juan Castillo
    AMERICAN-STATESMAN
    Sunday, March 25, 2007

    TAYLOR — Conversations with her mother and the son she left behind in Somalia because she feared for her life there. Visits to her grandmother’s tranquil vegetable garden. Walks past her grandparents’ house on her way home; they were always waiting to greet her.

    These recurring images filled Bahjo Hosen’s dreams as she slept — with her 2-year-old son, Mustafa, curled up next to her — on a narrow metal bunk bed in a roughly 8-foot-by-12-foot cell with an open toilet and sink in the T. Don Hutto Residential Center.

    On most mornings about 5:30, a guard’s rap on the door jarred Bahjo awake, drawing a dark curtain on her dreams and beginning another day of confinement while she and Mustafa pursued asylum in the U.S. immigration system’s slow-grinding bureaucracy.

    “I never dreamed I would be in jail,” said Hosen, who fled a Somalian clan’s death threats, only to be locked up in the immigrant detention center in Taylor.

    The former state prison is in the bull’s-eye of a growing controversy over a federal policy that requires families like Bahjo and Mustafa to be confined on immigration violations while they await outcomes of their asylum petitions or deportation. The waits can drag on for days, months, sometimes years.

    The controversy raises two questions: Is it inhumane to confine children and families for running afoul of immigration laws? And are there better alternatives than locking people up?

    Critics answer yes to both. Lawsuits filed on behalf of 10 children confined in Taylor accuse federal officials of illegally and inhumanely housing children, failing to meet the standards of a 1997 court settlement for the care of minors in immigration custody, and ignoring Congress’ orders to exhaust other options before detaining families — in homelike environments.

    At a hearing on the lawsuits last week, even U.S. District Judge Sam Sparks expressed exasperation at the restrictions under which families are living at the Hutto facility.

    “This is detention. This isn’t the penitentiary,” Sparks said. Detainees “have less rights than the people I send to the penitentiary.”

    Sparks ordered that some restrictions on attorney visits with detainee clients be removed immediately. . . .

  • Honks and Thumbs Up for Walk Against Immigrant Prisons

    Jay Johnson-Castro concluded his fourth day of walking early Saturday afternoon and is resting up for the final nine mile stretch to Raymondville tomorrow.

    A vigil outslide the Raymondville Tent City prison camp is scheduled for 1:00 pm Sunday.

    For the past two days, Johnson-Castro has had a few companions on the trek. Friday was a day without media. Saturday saw a news team from KGBT Channel 4 TV Harlingen.

    “Here’s what’s shocking,” says Johnson-Castro by cell phone Saturday evening. “We get get honks of support constantly, even without much media coverage. The grassroots people know.”

    “Tractor trailers,Cadillacs, SUVs, and old jalopies give us honks and thumbs up.”

    Meanwhile, back home at the Texas Civil Rights Review, we have permission to publish the following email about Friday’s story reprinted at CounterPunch:

    Dear Greg Moses,

    Great story. Please keep up the good work.

    Please, tell Jay Johnson-Castro and John Neck that it’s a good thing that they’re doing.

    Thank them for me, and for all Americans who still treasure ideals now foresaken.

    John Francis Lee
    Thailand


    Dear John, I read the email to Jay, and he will be in touch.–gm

  • Archive: Protest Walker Opposes Splitting Families

    Border Wall-ker presses for resolutions against splitting immigrant families

    By Steve Taylor
    Rio Grande Guardian (subscription)

    BROWNSVILLE – Border Wall-ker Jay Johnson-Castro is asking border legislators and the cities he is currently walking through to follow the City of Chicago’s lead and pass resolutions opposing the separation of immigrant families.

    Johnson-Castro, a bed and breakfast owner from Del Rio, said his latest walk, which started Wednesday morning in Brownsville, aims to “free the Huddled Masses.”

    The walk takes in vigils outside the IES facility in Los Fresnos that houses immigrant children, and the Port Isabel Detention Center in Bayview, where immigrants from Massachusetts were recently sent.

    The walk ends in Raymondville on Sunday at the new U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement-run detention facility commonly referred to as Tent City….

    [[Note: next week Jay Johnson-Castro will join Dallas vigils calling for reunification of the Hazahza family, which has been split since a roundup in early November.–gm]

  • Archive: Harlingen TV on Border Prison Protest

    Reported by Marcy Martinez
    KGBT 4 – TV Harlingen

    A protest walk against detention centers in Bayview and Raymondville is slowly making it’s way through southern Cameron and Willacy County. It’s a small group with a big message.

    John Neck is driving behind the walking protestors and plans to stay with them the entire way.
    “They’re locking people up for no reason and all they want to do is work.”

    Neck agrees with walk organizer Jay Johnson that illegal immigrants being held in Cameron and Willacy County detention centers should be released.

    “I say let’s let them free, let’s let them work. They’re here to work . Let’s not spend thousands of dollars a month to detain them.”

    Johnson and a few others started their protest walk in Brownsville Wednesday morning and will take what they consider very important steps.

    The protestors will stop briefly in Los Fresnos to hold vigil in front of the International Education Services Emergency Shelter, a facility which allegedly houses displaced children who became refugees when their parents were caught crossing the border illegally.

    “They have 160 kids that are in prison, they are in uniforms, they don’t have identity.”

    Action 4 News spoke to local directors of the facility who said they would like to let our cameras inside, but must follow protocol mandated by the Office of Refugee Resettlement who did not return our calls for an interview.

    Johnson says these children need to be reunited with their families and not punished for pursuing a better life in the United States.

    He hopes his walk through the two counties will open the eyes of lawmakers as to what he calls injustices to humans.

    The walk will end in Raymondville in about 5 days.