Wednesday, June 24, 2026
ADVT 
India

52 Indians, Mostly Sikhs, Held At Oregon Detention Centre In US

IANS, 20 Jun, 2018 12:30 PM
    A group of 52 Indians, mostly Sikhs, has been held at a detention centre in the US State of Oregon for being part of a large contingent of illegal immigrants seeking asylum, an American lawmaker has said.
     
     
    The Indians form the largest group of detainees in the total 123 illegal immigrants being held at a facility in Sheridan.
     
     
    The detention centre was recently visited by a group of Democratic lawmakers from the Oregon State, who later told the media about the alleged inhuman condition of the illegal immigrants. The immigrants are seeking asylum in the US.
     
     
    The detainees from India is the largest group of detainees being held in Sheridan, wrote Congresswoman Suzanne Bonamici on her blog post. She along with several other Democratic lawmakers from the State visited the detention centre Saturday.
     
     
    "Through our Punjabi translator, we learned that these men were planning to request asylum because they faced severe religious persecution in India. Most are Sikh or Christian. Instead they were incarcerated in a federal prison," she said.
     
     
    "They said they came to the United States for religious freedom, but they felt as if they were 'going crazy' because they are being confined in small cells for up to 22 hours a day," the Congresswoman said.
     
     
    The Indian detainees pointed out that the other non-immigrant prisoners get far more time out of cells, she said.
     
     
    Most of the detainees at the federal facility are asking for asylum because they experienced violence or persecution in their home countries, Bonamici said.
     
     
    Several had travelled to the border with a wife and a child or children; none knew where their family members are, she said.
     
     
    "This is a shameful hour in US history. I don't care what your stance on immigration is, no one should favour ripping children out of their parents' arms ...." Democratic Congressman Earl Blumenauer told reporters after visiting the detention center.
     
     
    He alleged that President Donald Trump and Attorney-General Jeff Sessions have doubled down on their anti-immigrant, xenophobic agenda with the administration's new "zero tolerance" policy on immigration.
     
     
    "The administration is criminalising families who are fleeing abuse and violence and separating children as ICE detains or deports their parents," he said in a statement.
     
     
    According to the local daily 'The Oregonian', of the total detainees, 52 have identified themselves as Sikhs or Christians from India.
     
     
    They alleged that they fled their country because of religious persecution from the Hindu majority. The Indians told the delegation that their Hindi and Punjabi translators were the first outsiders they've been able to talk to since they were imprisoned weeks ago, the daily reported.
     
     
    The Congressional delegation included Senators Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden.
     
     
    "As the child of parents whose families found refuge in America from the terrors of Nazi Germany, I strongly believe Donald Trump's cruel and callous treatment of human beings seeking asylum flies in the face of America's core humanitarian values," Wyden said.
     
     
    "Trump's choice of zero tolerance for the refugees we met today and for the others imprisoned around the country this Father's Day weekend makes zero sense and shows zero understanding of American values.
     
     
    "What I saw and heard today highlights the urgency of reversing Trump's mean, dangerous and damaging actions – returning America to our unique role as a beacon of hope that welcomed our immigrant ancestors and creating the future we want for our children," he said.
     
     
    These 123 detainees are among the more than 1,600 people that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is holding in federal prisons across the US as it enforces Trump's "zero-tolerance policy" on immigration, the lawmakers said in a joint statement.
     
     
    The men come from 16 different countries: Bangladesh, Brazil, Cameroon, China, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, India, Mauritania, Nepal, Peru and Russia, as well as from Congo and Eritrea, it said.
     
     
    The Congressional delegation were told that that detainees are being held upwards for 23 hours a day with three men bunked in each cell. The prison does not have the resources to house ICE detainees alongside pre-trial inmates who are normally held in the facility.
     
     
    The delegation was also told that incompatibility between BOP and ICE telephone systems was preventing ICE detainees at the BOP facility from accessing legal services.
     
     
    According to lawmakers, the detainees described stress as they sit in cells day after day without knowing when they will get a hearing, or get a lawyer, or what comes next.
     
     
    "Several men had been separated from their children, and experienced the added stress of not knowing what happened to their families.
     
     
    "Under Trump's 'zero-tolerance policy', the men's children were taken away at the border — one man said an ICE official told him, 'it's not my choice; the decision came from above' — and the fathers still don't have any information about their location, condition or well-being," the lawmakers said. 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Why Girls Are Wary Of Going To College After Gangrape In Bareily

    Why Girls Are Wary Of Going To College After Gangrape In Bareily
    In the wake of gangrape of a teacher along a state highway in Bareily, around 50 girls from an inter college have complained to the police about eve-teasing by local young men and have said they will not go to college unless proper security arrangements are made for them.

    Why Girls Are Wary Of Going To College After Gangrape In Bareily

    Elected Government Doesn't Mean Rulers: Lieutenant Governor Najeeb Jung

    Terming the Delhi High Court verdict as "historic", Lieutenant Governor Najeeb Jung said today, "When we get elected, it doesn't mean we are rulers and instead we will have to work and confine ourselves to our roles and jobs which are in the framework of the Constitution".

    Elected Government Doesn't Mean Rulers: Lieutenant Governor Najeeb Jung

    2 Missing After Maharashtra Bridge Tragedy, Judicial Probe Ordered

    2 Missing After Maharashtra Bridge Tragedy, Judicial Probe Ordered
    At least 42 people are missing in Wednesday's Mahad bridge collapse tragedy on the raging Savitri River, in which two state transport buses and four-five private vehicles were washed away, an official said.

    2 Missing After Maharashtra Bridge Tragedy, Judicial Probe Ordered

    Saudi King Assisting Stranded Indian Workers, Says Sushma Swaraj

    External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj on Thursday said the King of Saudi Arabia has given instructions to help the thousands of Indian workers stuck in the Gulf kingdom, including giving them free passage back home.

    Saudi King Assisting Stranded Indian Workers, Says Sushma Swaraj

    Delhi Government And Aap Slam Hc, Will Move SC

    Delhi Government And Aap Slam Hc, Will Move SC
    "We fully respect the Delhi High Court but we have a constitutional right to disagree with their verdict and will approach the Supreme Court," Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia told the media.

    Delhi Government And Aap Slam Hc, Will Move SC

    Akali MP Prem Singh Chandumajra Seeks Centre's Help For Punjabis Held Hostage In Libya

    Akali MP Prem Singh Chandumajra Seeks Centre's Help For Punjabis Held Hostage In Libya
    A member of parliament from Punjab on Tuesday sought the Centre's intervention to secure the release of three Punjabis allegedly held hostage by their employers in Libya.

    Akali MP Prem Singh Chandumajra Seeks Centre's Help For Punjabis Held Hostage In Libya