Waikato Times

Dark milestone for virus in US

- – TNS

More than 1000 undocument­ed immigrants detained by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t now have the coronaviru­s, as the surge of infections continues to grow with each new round of testing.

That milestone represents roughly an eightfold increase from a month ago.

About half of the detainees tested by ICE have the virus, even though the enforcemen­t agency has checked only 8 per cent of the 27,908 immigrants it holds in jails and prisons across the country. Most of those in custody are awaiting court hearings or deportatio­n.

Immigratio­n lawyers and advocates warn that migrant detainees are at particular risk of catching and spreading the coronaviru­s, due to the tight quarters in which they’re held. It’s likely that far more detainees have the coronaviru­s than is known, they argue, because a small fraction of the population has been tested.

‘‘These results are horrible but, sadly, not shocking,’’ said Jasmine Rivera, a leader in the Shut Down Berks Coalition, an immigrant-advocacy organisati­on based in Philadelph­ia. ‘‘Health experts and the broader community alike are fully aware of the high risk of Covid exposure that incarcerat­ion results in. To continue to needlessly endanger immigrants’ lives is cruel and must stop now.’’ A total of 1073 migrants are currently positive for the coronaviru­s – 49 per cent of the 2172 who’ve been tested – according to ICE figures released on Tuesday.

At least one man has died. In addition, 44 ICE employees who work at detention centres have tested positive, the new figures show.

ICE officials were considerin­g a request for comment on the new figures yesterday. The agency has said it follows all Centres for Disease

Control and Prevention guidelines in testing and treating detainees for Covid-19.

‘‘Obviously, their protocols are insufficie­nt and not working,’’ said Bridget Cambria, director of ALDEA – the People’s Justice Centre, which represents low-income people in detention. ‘‘The fact that 50 per cent of those tested (are) positive for Covid-19 demonstrat­es that the virus is rampant in ICE facilities, that testing is woefully underdone, that the facilities remain overcrowde­d with nonviolent, civil detainees.’’

The agency, she said, is deliberate­ly indifferen­t to the lives of the adults and children in custody, and to the health and safety of staff members who work in the facilities.

So far, 20 migrants have tested positive at the 375-bed Pike County Correction­al Facility in northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia. It is one of four sites in the state where ICE holds detainees, including the Berks County family detention center.

Immigrant advocates say the parents held at Berks and at the nation’s two other family detention centers were offered an untenable choice by ICE last week: allow their children to leave while the adults remained, or be held together as a family indefinite­ly amid the pandemic. None of the families at Berks signed the papers that would have allowed their children to be separated.

ICE did not respond to that allegation last week, but said yesterday that it still may wish to comment.

‘‘These results are horrible but, sadly, not shocking.’’ Jasmine Rivera, Shut Down Berks Coalition, an immigrant-advocacy organisati­on

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