Report reveals ‘barbaric, negligent’ treatment of migrants in US detention centers
ANKARA (AA) – Migrants held in the detention centers of the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) experienced “negligent” medical care, “unsafe and filthy” conditions, and racist abuse, a report said.
Inspectors, assigned by the Department of Civil Rights and Freedoms of the Ministry of Homeland Security to investigate human rights violations in these centers, prepared a 1,600-page confidential report.
The report, published by the National Public Radio (NPR), funded by public donations in the US, revealed the conditions of those held in ICE centers.
Inspectors examined more than 24 ICE-owned detention centers in 16 US states from 2017 to 2019.
They found “negligent” medical care, including mental health care, “unsafe and filthy” conditions and even routinized racist abuse of detainees. There were instances in which the mentally ill detainees were sprayed with pepper. In some cases, these even contributed to detainee deaths.
In Georgia, a nurse ignored an ICE detainee who asked for an inhaler to treat his asthma. Even though he was never examined by the medical staff, the nurse put a note in the medical record that “he was seen in sick call.”
In Pennsylvania, a group of “correctional officers” strapped a mentally ill male ICE detainee into a restraint chair and gave the lone female officer a pair of scissors to cut off his clothes for a strip search.
“There is no justifiable correctional reason that required the detainee who had a mental health condition to have his clothes cut off by a female officer while he was compliant in a restraint chair. This is a barbaric practice and clearly violates … basic principles of humanity,” the report said.
The US government avoided sharing the report.
NPR, which filed a lawsuit under the Freedom of Information Act, was able to access the report as a result of the federal judge’s decision.
Migrants from Africa and Asia as well as Latin America face hazards to reach the US to begin a better life in order to escape crippling poverty, conflict and war.