30 Haiti Quake Survivors Who Fled To U.S. Jailed For Lacking Visas
From the NY Times:
More than two months after the earthquake that devastated Haiti, at least 30 survivors who were waved onto planes by Marines in the chaotic aftermath are prisoners of the United States immigration system, locked up since their arrival in detention centers in Florida.
In Haiti, some were pulled from the rubble, their legal advocates say. Some lost parents, siblings or children. Many were seeking food, safety or medical care at the Port-au-Prince airport when terrifying aftershocks prompted hasty evacuations by military transports, with no time for immigration processing. None have criminal histories.
GALLERY: Haiti Earthquake
- Trump’s Brazen Takeover Of The Library Of Congress Is Another Direct Threat To Democracy
- ‘Sinners’: Black Horror Scholars Discuss The Blockbuster Film
- The African American Policy Forum’s 5th Annual CRT Summer School Series Was A Call To Action For Social Justice
- Sean Combs’ Legal Team Claims ‘Mutual Abuse’ In Relationship With Cassie Ventura
- The Tragic Case Of Rodney Hinton Jr. And The Trauma Of Black Grief In America
But when they landed in the United States without visas, they were taken into custody by immigration authorities and held for deportation, even though deportations to Haiti have been suspended indefinitely since the earthquake. Legal advocates who stumbled on the survivors in February at the Broward County Transitional Center, a privately operated immigration jail in Pompano Beach, Fla., have tried for weeks to persuade government officials to release them to citizen relatives who are eager to take them in, letters and affidavits show.
Meanwhile, the detainees have received little or no mental health care for the trauma they suffered, lawyers at the Florida Immigrant Advocacy Center said, despite an offer of free treatment at the jail by a local Creole-speaking psychotherapist.
RELATED STORIES
U.S. To Fleeing Haitians: “You Will Be Sent Home”
Why Haiti Has A Special Place In The Hearts Of Black Americans