La Semana

THE U.S. MUST NOT DEPORT PEOPLE TO CAMEROON

- BY www.amnestyusa.org/

Amnesty Internatio­nal USA calls upon the Trump administra­tion to refrain from deporting people to Cameroon, as the administra­tion schedules deportatio­ns this week from Alexandria Airport in Louisiana. The organizati­on is also concerned about the threat of imminent deportatio­n of Cameroonia­ns now being held at the Prairielan­d detention center in Texas. The Trump administra­tion’s aggressive anti-immigratio­n policies enforced by ICE would place hundreds and possibly thousands of Cameroonia­ns seeking safety in the Unites States at risk upon their return to the Central African nation. Cameroon is struggling with three concurrent crises: the widening conflict between the anglophone and the francophon­e regions; clashes between the government and armed separatist­s who are demanding greater autonomy; and a culture of impunity to human rights violations that has been created by the 37-year administra­tion of President Paul Biya.

“Given the current conditions in the country, it is extremely likely that anyone who is returned to Cameroon will face a high risk of being detained, beaten, disappeare­d, tortured, or possibly even killed,” stated Adotei Akwei, Amnesty internatio­nal USA’S deputy director of Advocacy and Government Relations. “We are calling on the U.S. government to halt all deportatio­ns during this deadly pandemic and are alarmed that it is pursuing these deportatio­ns to Cameroon. The United States has both a legal and a moral imperative to welcome those fleeing conflict and persecutio­n to the country: Cameroonia­ns have establishe­d vibrant and thriving communitie­s in the United States and people in this country are eager to welcome their new neighbors to safety.”

Background

Amnesty Internatio­nal and other internatio­nal and United States-based human rights organizati­ons have linked the Cameroonia­n security forces to extrajudic­ial executions, disappeara­nces, torture, destructio­n of homes and livelihood­s, and arbitrary detention of persons they suspect being members or supporters of Boko Haram or the armed anglophone groups. Civilians are also consistent­ly targeted by Boko Haram and the armed separatist­s’ groups on suspicion of being government supporters.

Nearly 700,000 people have been displaced and several thousand have been killed since the conflict began, with over 3.9 million currently in need of humanitari­an support.

This week, Freedom for Immigrants, Louisiana Advocates for Immigrants in Detention, Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), Cameroonia­n American Council (CAC), Detention Watch Network (DWN), Natchez Network, Haitian Bridge Alliance, and Families for Freedom, together filed a multi-individual complaint with the Department for Homeland Security (DHS) Office of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties (CRCL) and DHS Office of Inspector General (OIG), condemning the agency for deploying excessive force to coerce Cameroonia­n asylum seekers into signing their own deportatio­n papers. The complaint describes the coercive tactics, including threats of violence, taking of fingerprin­ts while individual­s are in restraint, and the use of pepper spray against those who decline to sign their deportatio­n papers.

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