Obama Administration Maitains the Criminal Bush Regime's Anti-Human Rights Immigration Detention System

Unfortunately, the Obama administration is apparently content to follow in the footsteps of the criminal Bush administration in ignoring and violating human and civil rights.

It is a shameful state of affairs and calls into question the integrity and lack ethics and morals of this so called Democratic administration that has been consistently betraying the values and principles of the Democratic party.

The latest episode reported by the NYTimes:
"The Obama administration has refused to make legally enforceable rules for immigration detention, rejecting a federal court petition by former detainees and their advocates and embracing a Bush-era inspection system that relies in part on private contractors.

"The decision, contained in a six-page letter received by the plaintiffs this week, disappointed and angered immigration advocacy organizations around the country. They pointed to a stream of newly available documents that underscore the government’s failure to enforce minimum standards it set in 2000, including those concerning detainees’ access to basic health care, telephones and lawyers, even as the number of people detained has soared to more than 400,000 a year.

"The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the immigration detention system, a conglomeration of county jails, federal centers and privately run prisons, concluded “that rule-making would be laborious, time-consuming and less flexible” than the review process now in place, Jane Holl Lute, the agency’s deputy secretary, said in the letter.

"The department maintained that current inspections by the government, and a shift in 2008 to “performance-based standards” monitored by private contractors, “provide adequately for both quality control and accountability.”

"The “performance-based” standards the Obama administration has now embraced have no penalties and are not significantly different from what failed in the past, said Karen Tumlin, a lawyer with the National Immigration Law Center in California. On Tuesday, the center issued what it called “the first nationwide comprehensive report” on violations of detention standards, based on records from 2004 and 2005 obtained through Freedom of Information litigation.

"Dozens of more recent inspection documents, some from this year, show a similar pattern, said Chuck Roth, the director of litigation for the Chicago group, Heartland Alliance’s National Immigration Justice Center. Many were posted by the government itself on the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Web site after the center won a three-year federal court battle to force their release.

“ 'The groups that ICE commonly contracts with are staffed by former ICE employees and former corrections officers who have a vested interest in pleasing ICE,' Mr. Roth said, 'so we haven’t seen them take the useful watchdog role.'

"The documents include eight years of monitoring reports by the American Bar Association, which has been granted access to detention centers and detainees only on condition that its findings, shared with the government, are not made public.

"Reports from two bar association visits to the Elizabeth Detention Center in Elizabeth, N.J., in January 2006 and July 2007, illustrate the weaknesses. In 2006, the team noted detainee complaints about medical neglect and threats of physical violence that were reported to guards but ignored.

"A year and a half later, a return visit was cut by the center to two hours from six hours, and “inexplicably, many of the areas that the delegation had requested to visit in advance and needed to see in order to fulfill its mission were locked” and off limits.

"The delegation was unaware that only two months earlier a 52-year-old tailor named Boubacar Bah had died after suffering a skull fracture in the jail and being locked in an isolation cell without treatment for more than 13 hours.

“ 'This whole detention system that has been created is a human rights nightmare,' said Mary Meg McCarthy, executive director of the National Immigrant Justice Center. 'The past administration created this, and now we need to dismantle it.'' "

Apparently, the Obama administration does not agree and plans to continue to maintain the Bush anti-human rights disaster that is immigration detention

 

What did you think of this article?




Trackbacks
  • No trackbacks exist for this post.
Comments
  • No comments exist for this post.
Leave a comment

Submitted comments are subject to moderation before being displayed.

 Name

 Email (will not be published)

 Website

Your comment is 0 characters limited to 3000 characters.