Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. detention facility

jail.jpgImmigrant detainees at a privately-run detention center in rural south Louisiana have waged a series of hunger strikes during the past four weeks to protest inhumane conditions and human rights violations at the jail.

Detainees have undertaken rotating 72-hour hunger strikes over the last month to protest conditions, Saket Soni, executive director of the New Orleans Workers' Center for Racial Justice, told the Associated Press. Detainees would strike for longer periods, Soni said, but they feared inadequate medical care and the placement of strikers in solitary confinement could lead to serious illnesses.

This past weekend the group of detainees began their fifth three-day hunger strike to protest poor conditions at the South Louisiana Correctional Center, a detention center in Basile, La. operated by the private contractor LCS Corrections Services Inc. and the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

According to the New Orleans Workers' Center for Racial Justice, more than 100 detainees acted as human rights monitors inside the jail throughout July. "Over the course of a month, detainee human rights monitors recorded complaints, attempted to lodge hundreds of grievances, and communicated with advocates about jail conditions," said NOWCRJ, which released a report of their findings and the accounts of the several detainees.

Facing South has reported on the problems in U.S. immigrant detention. For the past year, reports of immigrant death, abuse, neglect, inhumane treatment, and inadequate health care in immigration custody have been surfacing across the country. Immigrant rights groups have criticized ICE's detention practices, which they say routinely violate the rights of detained immigrants.

Last week the National Immigration Law Center issued the first comprehensive report on abuses in the immigrant detention system, which holds about 30,000 on any given day and more than 300,000 a year. As Facing South reported, NILC found that ICE has been systematically violating its own minimum monitoring standards in regulating immigration detention centers across the country.

The NOWCRJ report underscores that the Basile facility is also in violation of several standards issued by the Department of Homeland Security for immigrant detainees. In fact, many of the poor conditions reported by Basile detainees are similar to those highlighted in the national report by NILC. Immigrants at the detention center in Basile have reported: lack of adequate medical care, even for serious ailments like leukemia, high blood pressure and asthma; lack of access to fundamental information, telephones, mail and legal materials; severe isolation; and an extreme scarcity and lack of access to personal hygiene products such as soap, toothpaste, toilet paper, underwear, clothing, bedding and towels. The NOWCRJ report also reveals an ongoing lack of responsible oversight by ICE.

In the NOWCRJ report, detainee Fausto Gonzalez discusses the unsanitary conditions:

It's not fit for a human being.
...
Inside the dormitory, everything is dirty. There are rats, mosquitoes, flies, and spiders inside the cell and inside the dorm. The ventilation is terrible. For people like me who have allergies and asthma, it affects us very much.

We have tried to complain about all of these problems, and we haven't gotten anywhere. They tell us, "It's a jail. This is how it is."

When ICE and other officials refused to consider their complaints, the Basile detainees launched hunger strikes. Several detainees have faced disciplinary retaliation for speaking out about human rights abuses and detention conditions, including being placed in isolation for days at a time. Since July 27, six men have been put in solitary confinement as a result of their hunger strike. The non-profit legal group, the Center for Constitutional Rights issued a statement last week saying, "Solitary confinement as retaliatory punishment for peaceful protest of conditions is unacceptable."

The NOWCRJ report contains testimony from several detainees, whose stories reveal a bleak portrait of life at the detention center:

"I have been in the custody of immigration for over a month. I still have not been able to speak with my family about where I am."
--Jorge Gomez:, detainee human rights monitor reporting on violations of ICE minimum standards governing telephone access.

"I am in [solitary confinement], under investigation for planning a hunger strike. I believe that they are going to keep me in the hole, [solitary confinement], until after Monday so that we do not have a hunger strike to expose and protest the bad conditions in this jail. When my legal representatives came to see me on Thursday no one notified me and they told them that I had refused to meet with them."
--Joaquin Lopez Pena, reporting on violations of ICE minimum standards governing disciplinary policy.

"I am preparing to die here in detention. I hope my body will provide testimony that the system needs to change."
--Juan Marin Corona, detainee and hunger striker in Basile, La. immigration detention center

"For about three weeks in May, the jail ran out of soap and toothpaste -- except in the commissary. If you did not have money you had to just bathe with water and no soap.

"These unsanitary conditions affect our mental and physical health. I developed a rash on my groin because of the lack of soap. When one person gets sick - a fever or cough - it spreads very quickly. We are not the strong, healthy men we were when we arrived."
--Edgar Bojorge Alcantara, detainee and hunger striker in Basile, La. immigration detention center

"Even though I was showing many symptoms, no one offered me any medical attention [...] I was so sick that I was delirious, vomiting, had no appetite, a strong head ache, fever, I was very cold, and I had a cold sweat. In my cell there are more than forty people who are sick. As far as I know, no one in my cell has had a blood test or any lab testing done."
--Edwin Dubon Gonzalez, detainee and hunger striker in Basile, La. immigration detention center

"We are not animals, and don't deserve to be treated like animals. We are human beings."
Fausto Gonzalez, detainee and hunger striker in Basile, La. immigration detention center

The detainees' fight for human rights at the detention center in Louisiana is part of a larger struggle by immigrants to protest inhumane detention conditions that violate human rights standards. As Facing South reported, poor conditions led to the riots in a Texas private prison in February. In June, immigrant advocates in Georgia protested the mounting number of immigrant deaths in ICE detention centers.

As the NOWCRJ report underscores, immigrant detainees at the Basile facility have turned their experiences into a "national flashpoint" for the debate on detention standards and human rights. Detainees plan to continue to monitor human rights conditions at Basile facility, and according to the report, they are asking DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano to not only investigate the facility and meet with detainees' to hear their grievances, but to ultimately shut down the Basile detention facility.

"We demand that Napolitano stop doing business with private jails that profit from our extended detention in inhumane conditions," Joaquin Ruiz, a detainee who served as a human rights monitor in the ICE detention facility, said in the report. "Napolitano says there is quality and accountability in ICE jails. She should spend a week in Basile, Louisiana."

The latest hunger strike follows the Obama administration's rejection of a federal court petition by former detainees, their families and advocates calling for legally enforceable standards for immigration detention. Despite the lack of action from the Obama administration, the recent reports have spurred Congressional action. Last week, calling for changes in the immigrant detentions system, Sens. Robert Menendez (D-NJ) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) introduced the Strong Standards Act (Safe Treatment, Avoiding Needless Deaths, and Abuse Reduction in the Detention System), a bill that would set minimum detention standards and require DHS to ensure that laws concerning the treatment of detainees are enforced. The bill would address a lot of the issues brought up in the recent reports by NILC and NOWCRJ.

The bill includes some of the following minimum requirements:

  • Given that detainees are not permitted to access outside medical care, the bill would ensure detainees receive adequate medical and mental health, and dental care, including comprehensive intake screenings
  • Restricts transfers of detainees to another facility if such transfer would impair an attorney-client relationship, prejudice the detainee's legal case, or negatively impact the detainee's health
  • Ensure detainees have adequate access to telephones
  • Prevent physical and sexual abuse of detainees
  • Limit the use of solitary confinement and strip searches to situations where it is necessary for security and eliminates the use of these techniques on children
  • Require detention facilities to be acquired in locations where free or low-cost legal representation is available
  • Provide adequate translation services to ensure the safety and security of the facility
  • Provide detainees with access legal information, including an on-site law library
  • Allow legal, family and religious visitors in detention facilities
  • Require that all personnel in detention facilities and short-term detention facilities receive comprehensive training
  • Require that detainees in short term facilities receive water, food, toiletries, access to bathrooms, and ensures protections for children in short-term detention
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re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

There is a fine line here for my sympathies. I do feel bad for any men who are being treated inhumanely, but the extremist in me wants to know what crimes these men committed before I go feeling TOO badly for them. I feel very much, though, for all illegals. I can only imagine the drive that would make you cross a border in search of a better life. That frustrating inability to secure a green card visa must be absolutely maddening. I wonder what the country would look and feel like if we had NO border control at all...Would it be better, worse? Again though, if you came here illegally and then again broke the law, I have little sympathy for you, but do think you should be given the basic necessities like health care and hygienic products. Can't say I care about their 'feelings of isolation' though...

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

Don't do the crime if you can't do the time. I agree with the above comments and wonder what the incarceration conditions would be in their own country. Part of me thinks: The gall of these people to come to a foreign country, refuse to learn the language, commit crimes and then expect that country to put them up in a class A hotel for a jail. Come on...be real!!!

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

CAN'T SOMEBODY PLS HELP ME !!!!! I AM LOOKING FOR IMMIGRATION LAWYER. MY BOYFRIEND WAS SEND TO SOUTH CORRECTIONAL CENTER IN LA.
I JUST WANTED HIM OUT. THE PLACE STILL BAD. I DON'T AGREE WITH THE ABOVE STATEMENT. YOU MUST HAVE NO HEART, YOU DON'T UNDERSTAND THERE FEELING OR WHAT THEY GO THOUGHT. BUT ANYWAY, GOD BLESS THOSE THAT JUDGE OTHERS.

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

anonymous above-you have got a real problem accepting people for who they are, not where they are from. This is the land of the free and the home of the brave, a place where everyone can have a better life. A person is a person. We all have the same insides. We can not help where we are born or that we were born a different color. Yes, they may have committed the crime but don't you think that they deserve due process? What if it were you in another country and your visa ran out and you stayed beyond your due date? You get caught and instead of giving you due process, they throw you in a place like these?

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

I believe we all should help and love one another!!! We are all Gods children no matter what race, color or belief. No one should be treated wrong because they try to get a better life. they are trying for a better life cuz they are good people, if they didn't have a good heart and a dream like us they wouldn't be here trying to live a better life. Remember that always.

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

Every race has there good and bad.... Yes my partner entered the US illegally but has done nothing but work since he has been here. The only law he broke was wanting to be here to make a better life for his parents and family back home... He was in a roll over accident didn't hit anyone or anything and was taken to jail.... so don't judge a book by its cover.... do you not think he would rather be back home with his family.... but he gave that up to give them a better life.... so those who speak without knowing should walk in there shoes for a day....

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

I am from Canada and have been in the U.S. for over 10 years. My children are American, my wife is American, but I am not yet American. I was arrested for defending my wife in a fight with another person. I.C.E. detained me and sent me to Basile for a month. I was there in July when the hunger strikes began and I participated only because I was never given the opportunity to see a doctor for a medical condition that I clearly stated to the staff. (high blood pressure requiring medication). I had money sent to me from family to cover the cost of the medication, so I wasn't looking for any freebees. I never saw a doctor or recieved my medication. Hunger strikes are the only effective form of communication to the staff. (hmmmm). The conditions were not that great, but I would never say that they were deplorable. We had clean laundry and three hot meals a day. That was all that I expected, but we also had cable TV and lots of books to read. I never saw a rat or a spider. Cleaning in the dorms is done twice a day and is the responsibility of the inmates. All cleaning supplies are provided and the chores are done on a rotational basis determined by the inmates. (if you want it clean, then clean it). I talked on the phones to my lawyer and family several times a day with no problem. I should be getting my green card this summer and regret the path I chose to get it. I take full responsibility for my actions. If the intake staff would simply provide a proper medical evaluation, I wouldn't have a single complaint. All of these complaints about conditions etc. are nonsense. Information is available in all languages, spanish, chinese, etc. You just have to utilize it. (p.s. I did find an section of an eyebrow from some animal in my jumbo hot dog one day at lunch, yummy.)

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

THIS IS SO DISGUSTING WHAT AMERICA IS DOING TO THESE POOR PEOPLE!! DO YALL REALIZE THAT YALL ARE BREAKING UP FAMILIES THAT THEY HAVE MADE DPWN HERE LIKE MYSELF. YALL TOOK MY BOYFRIEND AND OUR 4 YEAR OLD DAUGHTER DRIED WATCHING HER DADDY BEING TAKIN TO JAIL RIGHT IN FRONT OF US. MY BOYFRIEND IS HARDWORKING AND A LOVING FATHER TO HIS CHILD AND FOR YALL TO JUST TAKE HIM LIKE THAT IS TERRIBLE. HE IS NOT A CRIMINAL HE ALWAYS PAYS HIS TICKETS WHEN HE GETS ONE AND OBEYS THE LAW AND DOES WHAT HE HAS TO DO. HE MAKES AN HONEST PAY CHECK EVERY WEEK AND SUPPORTS HIS CHILD. TO WATCH OUR DAUGHTER CRY FOR HER DADDY NOT TO LEAVE BROKE OUR HEARTS. YALL NEED TO LEAVE THE THEM ALONE AND STOP HURTING FAMILIES. GO LOOK FOR REAL CRIMINALS WHO ARE KILLING, STEALING, RAPING, BREAKING THE LAW, ETC. AND LEAVE THE REST OF THEM ALONE. ALL THIS IS JUST HEARTBREAKING TO THEIR FAMILIES AND YALL HAVE NO SYMPATHY IN YALLS HEARTS WHAT SO EVER. THIS IMMIGRATION ISSUE IS A REAL ISSUE THAT NEEDS TO BE FIXED ASAP!!

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

Father of my kids lives in California and was transfered all the way to South Lousiana Correctional by ICE. He has no money and my kids ask about him every night. Aren't there any immigration lawyers available? Help

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

My fiance just got sent to Basile, LA corr. facility yesterday July 27, 2010. I'm so worried about it. He is supposedly being deported to Mexico. We were supposed to get married Nov. 6. His 10 year old daughter cries for him every night. Is there any way to get them out or help them? I should have married him years ago but I have a fear of commitment so it's my fault we aren't married. He's a good man, hard worker, had the same job for 7 years, well-respected. He's NOT a criminal. His crime is he was poor in Mexico. You Americans that don't want them here... are you willing to go pick your own strawberries, apples, lettuce, blueberries, oranges, etc. etc. They do the jobs lazy Americans won't do. If anyone can help me get him out let me know. Mary P.

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

go back to mexico or canada you worthless , job stealing immigrants if you dont like it leave...its not our fault you are iun jail

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

Its so easy to sit there and make judgements on illegals without ever seeing the whole big picture. as someone who knows first hand what it feels like to have a family member be deported i can honestly say, we always knew this day would come.
as illegals there is always that fear of being deported, and yes most of them are doing the crime and are willing to do the time.
the conditions in mexico are deplorable. what one pays for a meal here, someone in mexico has to work a full day to get that much. how can you feed, clothe, shelter, and protect your famiily on say 20 dollars a day. and that is on a good day.
how do you protect your family from all of the drug cartels who run the towns. where do you run for help, the corrupted police? your neighbor, a family member? no. there is no one. how do you live in mexico and let unspeakable things happen to your family.
the answer is that you don't. you get a loan that takes you months to pay back. risk your life to cross the border then bust your ass doing hard labor with little pay because at the end of the day minimum wage for a day is far better than what you would make in a week down there. we all know its illegal to cross the border, we all know the risks, but a little jail time doesn't compare to the horrible things that happen in mexico

the sad truth is that as long as mexico doesn't take care of its people, its people will risks their lives to provide for their families. and no its not the u.s. job but what else can one do. you do what you do because you have to and not always because you want to.

not many americans understand because we live such a sheltered cozy life and have tunnel vision. we focus on what we want to see and shut our eyes of to the rest.
it make not be right to make the us taxpayers to foot the bill for this but it it is what it is. it will be harder to cross and it will be harder to live here but as long as there is a desire for a better life for our families. there will always be that brave one who unselfishly makes the sacrifice to scale the wall and hope for the best.

you can say what you want, belittle those who did not have the good fortune to have been born in a country like yours where all it takes is hard work and perseverance to make a good life.
but know that, that is all that you have on these people, have you ever thought aobut what if you had been borned in mexico? what would you do?
fear for your life and the life of your children on a daily basis or want to better yourself.
don't say i would never cross because you can't even imagine what life is like elsewhere. we do what we do out of neccesity not because we give a shit about the little trivial things in life.

count your blessings everyday of your life, because no matter what a screw up you may be, there is always tomorrow to fix it.
after all, you live in the land of the free and the home of the brave. you are an american by chance and nothing else. it doesn't make you better than those who happened to be born into a corrupted country.
so say what you will but at the end of the day, it is what it is. and it will continue to be as long as mexico is the way it is. there will always be those persistant few who will never give up on their dreams of a better tomorrow.

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

iTS NOT ALWAYS THE CASE THAT THEY COME OVER FOR A BETTER LiFE, SOMETiMES THEY COME OVER BECAUSE OF GANGS AND ViOLENCE...
MY HUSBAND CAME OVER WHEN HE WAS A MiNOR, WE ARE LEGALLY MARRiED AND TO BE HONEST HE GOT STOPPED AND WAS DRiNKiNG BUT HE KNOWS THAT iT WAS HiS FAULT AND KNOWS THAT HE HAS TO PAY THE PRiCE. BUT HE iS NOT A BAD PERSON AND OUR ALMOST 4 MONTH OLD SON HAS TO BEGiN HiS LiFE WiTHOUT HiS FATHER. HE WAS THERE FOR OUR SON'S BiRTH..i HOPE THAT HE DOES NOT GET DEPORTED BACK TO HONDURAS. i AM A U.S. CiTiZEN HALF WHiTE HALF GUATEMALAN...PEOPLE PLEASE HAVE A HEART AND JUST PUT YOURSELF iN THEiR POSiTiON AND THiNK WHAT WOULD YOU DO FOR YOUR FAMiLY.

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

i remember i was there for 7 months fighting for my case.i went from florida to slcc it was a big change. first of all the facility was old and roasted, it was a lot of racism!!! trust me i was there.my bunk was roasted n realy dirty like all the rooms,stink,no respect for nobody it was crazy!!! the food was ok but a small portion.some days we eat salami sandwishes wish it suck!honesly we was not inmates, we allready did our time for that. even inmates in slcc said that they get treated better in there. it was crazy good thing i sign for my deportation.im not trying to talk bad or anything like that, i just feel what they comming from. they need their rights some people in there are not criminals.they go to the states to work for there family.thank you for who ever is reading this and sorry for the spelling i am from peru and i wish i was in united states with my family againg and not mess up.

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

That place is like hell for the people there. They are treated worse than animals and left to be sick, hungry, dirty, cold and humiliated. The employees in charge are power hungry sado masochists. Walking around shouting degrading insults, foul language and clanking handcuffs in front of them to remind them that they can do whatever they want to do..and no one will stop them. This is our american government at work! This place needs to be shut down and the people running it should be held accountable for inhumane treatment of these poor immigrants. They are human beings and should be respected and treated with dignity. Not like a third world country! We should be showing that we are decent, honorable people. Its just so so wrong!

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

Don't believe these statements. I was a Sergent at this prison from 2000 to 2003 while I was in college. This prison has more to offer than most other prisons. They have color tv, air conditioned and heated dorms and microwaves in each pod.
The whining and complaining that is going on isn't unusual. Prisoners complain all the time and the only reason they are getting attention this time is because it is an immagration issue. I believe that the biggest problem there is that the inmates have nothing to do all day. They sit around. If you worked these guys more then they would be too tired to complain all day.

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

Also, To the person who claimed that these people aren't criminals you are wrong. They broke the law by coming into this country illegally. That makes them a criminal.

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

mi esposo hace una semana y media lo llevaron a ese centro fui de visita el sabado desde new orleans y no lo pude ver no me permitieron ni a mi ni a mis niños q son ciudadanos americanos .mis ni,os simpre lloran x el , el les hace mucha falta estan pequeños de 4 y 3 y 2 añitos me pueden ayudar a encontrar un abogado q no cobre tan caro x favor etoy desesperadfa no se q se pueda hacer x el .gracias a quien me de un buen consejo

re: Immigrant detainees hunger strike over conditions in La. det

yes it is why they go back to where they come from....its because of people like u...some of these men dont do anything wrong and get picked up...if anything u should be locked up