The Asian Age

100 Indians detained in US for entering illegally

Delhi sends consular official, keeps watch ◗ According to immigratio­n experts the largest number of Indians who enter the US illegally are from Punjab and Gujarat

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT with agency inputs

The Indian mission in the US has establishe­d contact with two immigratio­n detention centres where nearly 100 Indians, mostly from Punjab, are detained for illegally entering the country through its southern border.

According to officials, around 40- 45 Indians are at a federal detention centre in the Southern American state of New Mexico while 52 Indians, mostly Sikhs and Christians, are held in Oregon.

Indian government sources said, “Our embassy in Washington has establishe­d contacts with both the detention facilities ( in the US). A consular official has visited the detention facility in Oregon and another one is scheduled to visit the detention facility in New Mexico. We are monitoring the situation.”

More than a dozen of Indian detainees are being held at the New Mexico centre for months. And the rest of the Indians were brought to this detention centre about a week ago.

Notably, “religious persecutio­n” is the most common argument by Indians illegally crossing into the US and seeking political asylum.

According to immigratio­n attorney Akansha Kalra, the largest number of Indians who enter the US illegally are from Punjab and Gujarat.

Sharing her experience at an event organised by the Hindu American Foundation early this week, Ms Kalra said

young Indians in their 20s are crossing the border.

With the Trump administra­tion’s strict immigratio­n policy, she said, “hopefully they would get deterred”.

“They pay around ` 35- 40 lakhs to human smugglers just to help them cross the border. With this kind of administra­tion’s policy, hopefully, they would get deterred by it. But, so far, they keep on coming,” she said.

Most of these Indians get nabbed at the Mexico border, get processed in Texas and then shipped out to the Pennsylvan­ia detention centre, which is one of the largest of such detention facilities in the US.

Satnam Singh Chahal of the North American Punjabi Associatio­n ( Napa) said that informatio­n obtained through Freedom of Informatio­n Act ( FOIA) indicated that between 2013 and 2015, more than 27,000 Indians were apprehende­d on the US border.

Of these, over 4,000 were women and 350 were children. Many of them, it is reported, are still languishin­g in jails.

According to a FOIA request in 2015, more than 900 Indians were in various federal prisons on charges of illegally staying in the country.

Mr Satnam Singh Chahal alleged that there is a nexus of human trafficker­s, officials and politician­s in Punjab, who encourage young Punjabis to leave their homes to illegally enter the US.

“Using different modus operandi, people involved in human traffickin­g often put the lives of their clients in considerab­le danger. Failure to reach their promised destinatio­n leads to deportatio­n, exploitati­on, indebtedne­ss, imprisonme­nt and even death,” he said.

He urged the Punjab government to strictly enforce human traffickin­g laws passed by the state Assembly.

President Donald Trump on Thursday reversed his controvers­ial decision on immigratio­n by signing an executive order to end the separation of immigrant families on the USMexico border.

This was followed by widespread protests against the move of his administra­tion to separate children from their parents who illegally enter the country.

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