The Guardian (USA)

Reports reveal ‘egregious’ conditions in US migrant detention facilities

- Amanda Holpuch in New York

As the number of Central American families and children approachin­g the US-Mexico border continues its dramatic rise, the US is failing to provide adequate care to those already in detention.

Reports this week from the US Department of Homeland Security watchdog, the Office of Inspector General (OIG), and leaked documents, have revealed distressin­g conditions for migrants in the custody of US immigratio­n agencies.

Child migrants could soon lose access to recreation­al activities and English lessons, while conditions at adult detention facilities were found to pose immediate risks to immigrant health and safety.

These damning reports came the same week the US announced that the border patrol arrested an unpreceden­ted number of families at the border in May. Though the number of families attempting to enter the US has spiked, the overall total of attempted border crossings is below the records hit in the early 2000s when most people entering were adult males from Mexico.

In May, Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents apprehende­d 132,887 people at the southern border and 11,391 people arrived at ports of entry but did not have the documents required to enter the US. They are mostly Central Americans fleeing poverty, violence and the climate crisis.

“We are bursting at the seams,” said Randy Howe, CBP’s executive director of operations. “This can’t continue.”

Citing budget pressures because of the influxof children at the border, the health department agency that cares for children who arrive at the border on their own, the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt (ORR), has started to end funding for activities such as soccer and English classes for children in its custody. Children can spend months in ORR shelters, including tent cities.

A health department official emailed shelters last week explaining the funding for those programs was “unallowabl­e”, according to an email obtained by the Washington Post.

Denise Bell, researcher for refugee and migrant rights at Amnesty Internatio­nal USA, said the move was “unconscion­able”.

“Locking up children and then denying them legal aid, education, and even playtime is all part of this administra­tion’s cruel efforts to dehumanize people who have come to the US seeking safety,” Bell said in a statement. “Children’s human rights must be protected by ensuring they receive proper care while in government custody and are released as soon as possible.”

The homeland security and health department­s were also under pressure this week because of an alarming NBC report that revealed the government had kept immigrant children in a van for 39 hours while waiting to reunite them with their parents.

In July last year, 37 migrant children aged between five and 12 years old were held for two nights in the van after a federal judge ordered the Trump administra­tion to reunite families it had separated at the border, according to the report.

The Republican leader of the House energy and commerce committee, Oregon representa­tive Greg Walden, said the report’s findings were “unacceptab­le” and “indefensib­le”.

“This is not who we are as Americans,” Walden said in a statement. “I expect a prompt explanatio­n from the Department­s of Homeland Security and Health and Human Services about this failure.”

As advocates for migrant children raised concerns about these reports, the DHS inspector general released a report showing “egregious” conditions in four adult detention facilities across the US, including nooses found in detainee cells.

In 2018, immediate health and safety risks were observed at two of the facilities, Adelanto Ice Processing Center, referring to Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (Ice), in California, and Essex County Correction­al Facility, in New Jersey. At Essex, inspectors found open packages of raw chicken that had leaked blood over refrigerat­ion units – the kitchen manager was replaced during the inspection. At Adelanto, chicken smelled foul and appeared to be spoiled. At both locations, inspectors found bathrooms in poor condition with unusable toilets and mold on ceilings, mirrors and vents.

Three of the facilities were owned and operated by the private prison firm GEO Group: Adelanto in California, LaSalle Ice Processing Center in Louisiana and Aurora Ice Processing Center in Colorado. The fourth facility, Essex, was operated by the local correction­s department. Together, they house nearly 5,000 detainees.

“Our observatio­ns confirmed concerns identified in detainee grievances, which indicated unsafe and unhealthy conditions to varying degrees at all of the facilities we visited,” the inspector said.

Other problems inspectors observed included the Essex facility providing detainees with clothing only in extra large sizes, 3x and 4x, which detainees said they could not keep on. And three of the facilities were found to be violating homeland security department standards by inappropri­ately using handcuffs and strip searches without documentin­g a justificat­ion for doing so.

And in a separate inspector general report last week, officials found “dangerous overcrowdi­ng” at a border patrol processing facility in El Paso, Texas.

In May, inspectors found the processing center, which has a capacity of 125 people, held between 750 and 900 people. A cell meant to hold 12 people held 76 people and another with capacity for 35 held 155, according to the report.

Donald Trump has not directly addressed the problems uncovered in US detention facilities.

On Wednesday night, the president blamed Democrats and Mexico for the influx of immigrants at the border. His immigratio­n policies have so far failed to reduce the number of people making the dangerous journey north.

 ??  ?? In the Adelanto detention facility in California, inspectors found nooses in detainee cells, the segregatio­n of certain detainees in an overly restrictiv­e way and inadequate medical care, the report said. Photograph: Richard Vogel/AP
In the Adelanto detention facility in California, inspectors found nooses in detainee cells, the segregatio­n of certain detainees in an overly restrictiv­e way and inadequate medical care, the report said. Photograph: Richard Vogel/AP

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