The Borneo Post (Sabah)

We want the children free: A cry from inside migrant detention centre

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OTAY MESA, United States: ‘Where are the children?’ several women shout together from behind the detention centre wall. ‘We want the children free!’ ‘Do you hear us?’ supporters ask from outside. ‘What do you need?’

This was the short interplay between hundreds of protesters and people being held at a US detention centre for undocument­ed migrants in Otay Mesa, on the border with Mexico. A group of people held at the centre had been separated from their children as part of President Donald Trump’s ‘zero tolerance’ policy.

The president signed an order ending the practice of splitting migrant families, but 2,300 children have already been separated from their parents.

‘Shame,’ ‘Abolish ICE (Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t),’ and ‘You’re not alone,’ shouted the estimated 500 protesters rallied by religious leaders.

“I know those families are suffering and it is very hard to see that children have to go through the trauma of a detention centre when they are 10, five years old,” Erica Leyva, 24, who traveled from Los Angeles to join the protest, told AFP.

Though she was born in the United States, she was briefly detained with her undocument­ed parents when she was four years old. “I remember how it felt to be behind bars,” she said.

Otay Mesa detention centre – managed by a private company – has the capacity for some 1,500 people, though in January it announced an expansion of 30 per cent, according to local media. ICE did not respond to AFP’s calls about the detention center.

Democratic Senator Kamala Harris visited several undocument­ed women at the centre who were separated from their children.

“The stories they shared with me paint a picture of human rights abuses being committed by our government. We are so much better this,” she said.

Demonstrat­ors covered the name of the detention centre with a white sheet that read ‘concentrat­ion camp’ in black letters and placed toys and stuffed animals around in protest.

Pastor and activist Ben McBride requested a prayer for ‘our immigrant relatives’ before moving with a group to the fence, despite a ‘private property’ sign and the warning of two guards armed with pepper spray.

At the gate, topped with barbed wire, they tied children’s shoes and keys to demand the release and reunificat­ion with family of those detained.

“Release them!” they shouted. “Without justice there is no peace!” “This is indecent, it is immoral,” the pastor exclaimed to officials.

Apolonia Gregorio Jeronimo, 33, and two of her three children were visiting her detained husband at the centre. Her was arrested six months ago and can be deported in August.

“I thank you very much for your support,” said the woman, who told how her husband arrived in the United States fleeing gang violence in Guatemala. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Protesters attend a rally at the US Customs and Border Protection Detention Centre in McAllen, United States.
— AFP photo Protesters attend a rally at the US Customs and Border Protection Detention Centre in McAllen, United States.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? A protester tries to block a bus carrying migrant children out of a US Customs and Border Protection Detention Centre.
— AFP photo A protester tries to block a bus carrying migrant children out of a US Customs and Border Protection Detention Centre.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Dozens of women, men and their children, many fleeing poverty and violence in Honduras, Guatamala and El Salvador, arrive at a bus station following release from Customs and Border Protection in McAllen,Texas.
— AFP photo Dozens of women, men and their children, many fleeing poverty and violence in Honduras, Guatamala and El Salvador, arrive at a bus station following release from Customs and Border Protection in McAllen,Texas.

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