San Diego Union-Tribune

CAMEROONIA­NS FEAR DEPORTATIO­N WILL MEAN DEATH

- BY KATE MORRISSEY

Asylum seekers from Cameroon and the Democratic Republic of Congo are raising the alarm that U.S. immigratio­n officials plan to deport them on a chartered f light as soon as early this morning to countries where they believe they will be immediatel­y arrested and killed.

More than 200 asylum seekers, the majority from Cameroon, have been transferre­d to Prairielan­d Detention Center near Dallas in preparatio­n for the f light, according to phone interviews with detainees. Some detainees say they were forcibly coerced into signing deportatio­n paperwork, and concerns over the possibilit­y of falsified travel documents have also arisen as advocates and attorneys campaign to stop the deportatio­ns.

“We came here because we thought America is able to rescue us from our problems, but America is unable to rescue us,” said one asylum seeker from Cameroon.

The Union-Tribune recently published an investigat­ion into what can happen when asylum seekers in legitimate danger are deported to the places they f led. While that investigat­ion focused on the difficulti­es that someone can have in

proving a gang violence case, asylum claims from Cameroon and the Democratic Republic of Congo are generally more straightfo­rward cases of political persecutio­n by government itself.

The Cameroonia­n government, controlled by French-speaking groups, has been targeting Englishspe­aking cultural groups, known as anglophone­s, for years in an escalating civil conf lict. Many anglophone­s, including a journalist who won her case in San Diego in 2019, have sought asylum from that persecutio­n in the United States.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, people who oppose the political party in power — and even election observers who report inconsiste­ncies — have had to f lee for their lives, including a family that was separated from the father at the San Diego-Tijuana border in 2019.

But in a system that is known for its capricious­ness and that has been steadily restricted under President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, many of these asylum seekers with seemingly legitimate cases have been ordered deported.

“We know we are sending these people back to their deaths,” said Ruth Hargrove, a former professor at the California Western School of Law whose client is among those scheduled for deportatio­n. “I don’t understand how we as a country can do that. I don’t understand. We know exactly what we’re doing.”

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t did not respond to a request for comment on the situation.

Hargrove’s client has been in immigratio­n detention since March 2019. He came to the border at the San Ysidro Port of Entry to request protection but was quickly transferre­d to a facility in Louisiana.

The first attorney her client hired barely met with him before the trial, Hargrove said, and had already been discipline­d for similar negligence in other cases.

“He didn’t know 90 percent of what had happened to my client,” Hargrove said.

That meant that the judge didn’t either.

Because he was believed to be affiliated with anglophone protests, Hargrove’s client had been imprisoned in Cameroon, tortured and threatened with death. Several men who were imprisoned with him were taken away from their shared cell and executed, Hargrove said.

“He was f logged naked,” Hargrove said. “He was forced to sleep naked on an icy f loor.”

Her client managed to escape, sneaked out of Cameroon and made his way up from South America on the dangerous but well-worn migrant route to the U.S. border.

After he lost his case and appeal because of the incompeten­ce of his first attorney, Hargrove said, another attorney hired to help her client reopen his case with new evidence took his family’s money and never filed the motion.

That’s when Hargrove got involved. But now, it may be too late.

The Board of Immigratio­n Appeals has so far denied her request for a stay on her client’s deportatio­n.

“He’ll be tortured, and he’ll die, and the court could grant his motion (to reopen), but he’ll be dead,” she said.

Detainees from both countries who are scheduled to be on the f light believe that they will be disappeare­d by their government­s at the airport when they arrive.

“In July, ICE deport some people. Until now their family is still crying because they didn’t saw them,” said one Congolese asylum seeker in his limited English. “They disappear.”

Human rights organizati­ons, including the Southern Poverty Law Center, have filed a complaint with the Department of Homeland Security Office of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties on behalf of eight detainees who said many of them were beaten and coerced into signing deportatio­n paperwork at Adams County Correction­al Facility before being transferre­d to Texas.

Several in the complaint recounted ICE officials or facility guards pinning them down by the neck or otherwise making it impossible for them to breathe.

One man said he was pepper-sprayed in the eyes and strangled.

“I kept telling him, ‘I can’t breathe,’ ” the man said, according to the complaint. “I almost died.”

The man said he is still suffering from pain in his neck and struggling with his vision.

Some said they were dragged across the ground by officials to an area of the detention center where detainees are taken for punishment.

They said ICE officials or facility guards forcibly pressed their thumbs to the documents in place of a signature when they refused to sign. One said his fingers had been broken in the process.

All of this comes after Cameroonia­n detainees in Louisiana were separated after they organized a hunger strike over conditions there, according to Rebecca Cassler, an attorney with the Southern Poverty Law Center.

“It’s deeply unfair that their cases were denied, and it’s a symptom of the broken system,” Cassler said. “These are some of the most classic asylum claims that you could have — groups that are opposing a violent dictatoria­l government who are f leeing and coming to the United States thinking this is a place where their human rights might be respected — and they’ve simply been jailed, tortured, and now they’re going to be removed.”

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