Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
International

Over 100 South Asian Immigrant Detainees On Hunger Strike At Three Detention Centres In US

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Nov, 2015 03:03 PM
    About 110 detainees, largely from South Asia, at three immigration detention centres in Alabama and California are on hunger strike demanding an end to their indefinite confinement and improved conditions.
     
    The hunger strikes started Wednesday at detention centres in Etowah County, Alabama, Theo Lacey facility in Orange County, California, and Otay detention facility in San Diego, California, according to Vice News.
     
    Most of the hunger strikers are Bangladeshi. They also include detainees from India, Pakistan, Nigeria, Cameroon, Ethiopia and Togo.
     
    The detainees are calling for an end to all detention and deportation, according to Fahd Ahmed, executive director of Desis Rising Up and Moving (DRUM), a New York-based organization that advocates on behalf of South Asian immigrants.
     
    They are also demanding the abolition of the so-called "bed quota," which requires immigration authorities to hold an average of 34,000 people in detention on any given day, he said.
     
    All of the hunger strikers are said to be asylum seekers that have passed the "credible fear" stage of the asylum review process, although some have since had their claims denied, Vice News said.
     
    According to a 2010 Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) policy, asylum seekers with credible fear findings are supposed to be automatically considered for parole from detention. Some of the hunger strikers have been held for two years.
     
    Many of the hunger strikers are said to support the Bangladesh National Party (BNP), the country's second largest political group that according to a recent Department of Homeland Security (DHS) decision qualifies as an undesignated "Tier III" terrorist organization.
     
    The latest hunger strike was preceded by a similar action in October, when dozens of immigrant detainees in El Paso and Louisiana's La Salle facility refused meals for about 10 days.
     
    Former El Paso hunger striker Kamran Ahmed said on Thursday that ICE has mischaracterized his political views in relation to the BNP. "We don't know why they call us terrorists," he said.
     
    In addition to ending indefinite detention and the ICE bed quota, the latest hunger strikers are also calling for better conditions, including access to better health care, clean clothes and unspoiled food, and a less repressive disciplinary regime.
     
    According to a 2013 report by Detention Watch Network, the conditions at Etowah County Detention Centre, where about 48 people are on hunger strike, "are among the worst in country."
     
    "Many of us even attempted to commit suicide for fearing of the government retribution if deported," an asylum-seeker named Mahbubur who is being held at Etowah was quoted as saying in a press release about the hunger strike.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-American Mother Bindu Philips Seeks Return Of Her Abducted Children

    Indian-American Mother Bindu Philips Seeks Return Of Her Abducted Children
    Recounting her heartrending tale of woe, an Indian-American mother turned to US lawmakers for help to get back her two children allegedly abducted to India by her ex-husband six years ago.

    Indian-American Mother Bindu Philips Seeks Return Of Her Abducted Children

    Alabama Police Officer Eric Parker Indicted For Assaulting Indian Grandfather

    Alabama Police Officer Eric Parker Indicted For Assaulting Indian Grandfather
    Eric Parker, the Madison police officer who slammed Sureshbhai Patel, 57, to the ground in the Feb 6 incident leaving him partially paralysed, was Friday charged with a civil rights violation that carries up to 10 years in prison.

    Alabama Police Officer Eric Parker Indicted For Assaulting Indian Grandfather

    New Zealand Court Holds Indian-origin Men Guilty Of Murder

    New Zealand Court Holds Indian-origin Men Guilty Of Murder
    A court in New Zealand has found two Indian-origin men guilty of murder and they are expected to be jailed for life with a minimum non-parole period of at least 10 years, media reported.

    New Zealand Court Holds Indian-origin Men Guilty Of Murder

    Two US lawmakers call for Diwali commemorative stamp

    Two US lawmakers call for Diwali commemorative stamp
    Two influential US lawmakers have submitted a bipartisan Senate resolution calling for the US Postal Service to issue a commemorative stamp in honor of the holiday of Diwali.

    Two US lawmakers call for Diwali commemorative stamp

    Germanwings Co-pilot Andreas Lubitz Was On Sick Leave, Hospital Confirms Visits

    The sick leave note was found during a search of the co-pilot Andreas Lubitz's home, torn to bits among other documents, implicating mental illness and proving that he had been receiving medical treatment, Efe news agency reported.

    Germanwings Co-pilot Andreas Lubitz Was On Sick Leave, Hospital Confirms Visits

    Kamloops Airport Evacuated Over Suspicious Package That Turned Out To Be A Painting

    Kamloops Airport Evacuated Over Suspicious Package That Turned Out To Be A Painting
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A rolled-up painting stored inside a tube is the latest suspicious-looking package to force an evacuation in Western Canada.

    Kamloops Airport Evacuated Over Suspicious Package That Turned Out To Be A Painting