Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
International

Five Illegal Sikh Migrants Released From Sheridan Federal Prison In US

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 Aug, 2018 12:58 PM
    Five illegal Sikh migrants are among eight others asylum seekers who have been released on bond from a prison in the US state of Oregon where they were locked up for three months after getting caught in the Trump administration's controversial "zero-tolerance" policy, immigration lawyers have said.
     
     
    A group of 52 Indians, mostly Sikhs, has been held at a detention centre in Oregon in May for being part of a large contingent of illegal immigrants seeking asylum. The Indians form the largest group of detainees in the total 124 illegal immigrants being held at the facility in Sheridan.
     
     
    Five migrants, all twenty-something men from India, made their first public appearance yesterday after nearly three months at the Oregon prison put them in the center of a political firestorm.
     
     
    "In the beginning I had no hope," Karandeep Singh, 24 was quoted as saying by the Oregon Live.
     
     
    "Now it's like a dream. I'm so happy. Thank you all of the people who have helped us."
     
     
    Many of the Indians are practicing Sikhs. It also presented problems inside the Sheridan prison, where they were prevented from following some basic Sikh practices, the report said.
     
     
    "I don't blame the prison officials," Karandeep said. "They probably didn't know how Sikhs pray."
     
     
    Those early days had been bleak, the migrants said.
     
     
    "We were seriously depressed," said Lovpreet Singh, 22, through an interpreter. We couldn't get out of our cells at all, let alone use the phone to call our families. Even the prison officials didn't know who we were. How were our families supposed to help us when they don't know where we are?"
     
     
    Eight asylum-seekers have been released from detention at the federal prison in Sheridan, Oregon, and more are expected to be released in the coming days, Victoria Bejarano-Muirhead, with the Innovation Law Lab said.
     
     
    The initial group of men sent to the federal prison at Sheridan came from 16 countries, which include India, Nepal and Bangladesh.
     
     
    After hearings determine the asylum seekers have a credible fear of being repatriated, they are eligible for release while their asylum applications are processed. The bond amounts typically run from USD 1,500 to USD 5,000 and are usually put up by family or friends,  Muirhead said.
     
     
    The first of their clients to be released from the Sheridan prison walked out of the prison gates Monday evening.
     
     
    "Upon leaving the building this young man got on his knees, kissed the ground and asked, 'Is this real?'" Katy Mitchell said, also with the Innovation Law Lab.
     
     
    The release comes almost two months after the American Civil Liberties Union of Oregon and the Innovation Law Lab sued to provide pro bono legal counsel to the asylum seekers.
     
     
    Immigration attorneys helped the detainees who asked for representation from the Innovation Law Lab to successfully pass their credible fear interviews, which begins the process of applying for refugee status in the US, it said.
     
     
    The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement placed the men in the federal prison because the federal immigration agency ran out of space in its detention centers designed to house asylum seekers and other immigrants who have not been convicted of a crime.
     
     
    Under US President Donald Trump's zero-tolerance policy, the US prosecuted anyone trying to enter the country illegally, including asylum seekers.
     
     
    Nearly 2,000 children were separated from their parents, with the adults being shipped to jails and children placed in the custody the Office of Refugee Resettlement between April 19 and May 31 of this year.
     
     
    The controversial decision however has been reversed by Trump through an executive order following widespread protests against the move.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    How Sikh Charity Khalsa Aid Is Helping Syrian Refugees - SEE PICS

    How Sikh Charity Khalsa Aid Is Helping Syrian Refugees - SEE PICS
    There are no signs of the civil war in Syria ending anytime soon. The crisis in the country has seen millions of its citizens become refugee in neighbouring countries.

    How Sikh Charity Khalsa Aid Is Helping Syrian Refugees - SEE PICS

    The Latest Fad In The Beauty World - Vampire Facial

    The Latest Fad In The Beauty World - Vampire Facial
    As the name suggests, the facial is considered to be a 'diabolical' beauty ritual, where the person is injected with their own blood for 'wonderful' skin.

    The Latest Fad In The Beauty World - Vampire Facial

    Facebook Jobs Now Available In India: How To Get Started

    Facebook has expanded the ability to apply to jobs directly on its platform to more than 40 countries including India.

    Facebook Jobs Now Available In India: How To Get Started

    Where Girls Pretend To Be Boys: A Bittersweet Afghan Social Tradition

    Where Girls Pretend To Be Boys: A Bittersweet Afghan Social Tradition
    The term "Bacha Posh" literally translated from the local Dari language means a "girl dressed like a boy". 

    Where Girls Pretend To Be Boys: A Bittersweet Afghan Social Tradition

    Future Very Bright For US-India Counterterrorism Cooperation: Trump Administration

    US Counterterrorism Coordinatorcredited the meetings between PM and US President Trump early in the latter's tenure as the reason behind a "powerful" partnership between the two nations

    Future Very Bright For US-India Counterterrorism Cooperation: Trump Administration

    War Of Words Between Toronto Police, TV Reporter Marci Ien Who Alleged Racism

    War Of Words Between Toronto Police, TV Reporter Marci Ien Who Alleged Racism
    A war of words has erupted between Toronto police and a broadcast journalist who claims she was pulled over because she is black.

    War Of Words Between Toronto Police, TV Reporter Marci Ien Who Alleged Racism