China Daily (Hong Kong)

Largest US immigratio­n raids in a decade net 680 arrests in Mississipp­i

- ROGELIO V. SOLIS / ASSOCIATED PRESS

MORTON, Mississipp­i — US immigratio­n officials raided seven Mississipp­i chicken processing plants on Wednesday, arresting 680 mostly Latino workers in the largest workplace sting in at least a decade.

The raids, planned months ago, happened just hours before US President Donald Trump visited El Paso, Texas, the majority-Latino border city where a man linked to an online screed about a “Hispanic invasion” was charged in a shooting that left 22 people dead.

“On a day when we seek unifying words and acts to heal the nation’s broken heart, President Trump allows so many families and communitie­s to be torn apart,” said Angelica Salas, executive director of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights.

About 600 agents from US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, or ICE, fanned out across the plants operated by five companies, surroundin­g the perimeters to prevent workers from fleeing.

In Morton, about 65 kilometers east of the capital of Jackson, workers filled three buses — two for men and one for women — at a Koch Foods plant.

Those arrested were taken to a military hangar to be processed for immigratio­n violations. About 70 family, friends and residents waved goodbye and shouted, “Let them go! Let them go!” Later, two more buses arrived.

Mississipp­i is the nation’s fifthlarge­st chicken-producing state and the plants’ tough processing jobs have mainly been filled by Latino immigrants eager to take whatever work they can get. Chicken plants dominate the economies of Morton and other small towns east of Jackson.

Matthew Albence, ICE’s acting director, told The Associated Press in an interview on Wednesday in the town of Pearl, just down the road from the Koch plant, that the raids could be the largest-ever workplace operation in any single state. Asked about their coinciding with Trump’s visit to El Paso, Albence responded, “This is a longterm operation that’s been going on.” He said raids are “racially neutral” and based on evidence of illegal residency.

The companies involved could be charged with knowingly hiring workers who are in the country illegally and will be scrutinize­d for tax, document and wage fraud, Albence said.

Bill Chandler, executive director of the Mississipp­i Immigrant Rights Alliance, called the “terrible” raids “another effort to drive Latinos out of Mississipp­i.”

“This is the same thing that Trump is doing at the border with the Border Patrol,” he said, referring to the increased crackdown on migrants coming into the US.

In a diplomatic note published by its foreign ministry on Wednesday, the Mexican government said it wanted US authoritie­s to share all informatio­n on the El Paso case to “determine if there are other individual­s and potential organizati­ons of ‘white supremacy’ seeking to put our community in danger in the United States”.

 ??  ?? Two people are taken into custody at a Koch Foods plant in Morton, Mississipp­i, on Wednesday.
Two people are taken into custody at a Koch Foods plant in Morton, Mississipp­i, on Wednesday.

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