Skip to main content

United States The Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency must be abolished

AS SOMEONE who was born and raised in the border state of New Mexico, US, I’m very familiar with political-speak about immigrants and the border, especially when it comes to talking about safety.

After 9/11, concerns about safety led to the passing of the Homeland Security Act, which created a new cabinet department as well as a new law enforcement agency: Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or Ice.

Ice was given a never-before-seen level of criminal and civil authority — in theory, to keep US citizens safe.

It’s now the largest investigative branch of the Homeland Security department. Unlike other law enforcement agencies like the FBI or Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), Ice doesn’t answer to the Department of Justice, which for decades has at least paid lip service to due process.

Far from being a law enforcement agency, Ice has become the closest thing we have to a lawless organisation. Rather than keeping citizens safe, the organisation has become a menace.

From separating families to having three-year-olds stand trial for deportation, and from staking out churches to stealing immigrants’ identities to open up fraudulent credit cards, Ice embodies cruelty.

More worrying still, people are dying in its custody at alarming rates.

In May, a transgender woman from Honduras named Roxsana Hernandez died in Ice custody in New Mexico. Roxsana came to the United States seeking asylum from persecution and violence in her home country.

Rather than being treated with the dignity and respect befitting all humans, and particularly those seeking asylum, she was detained by Ice and held in a freezing cold cell with the lights turned on 24 hours a day.

This approach to detention is so common it has a name — the icebox, because the cells feel as cold as a freezer.

As a queer, gender non-conforming New Mexican, this hit close to home for me.

Not only did Roxsana come to this country because she wanted the safety to live her life as her authentic self, but she died in Albuquerque, my hometown.

She died a terrifying and lonely death due to complications of pneumonia, likely caused by the frigid conditions of her detention. I have to say: her death certainly doesn’t make me any safer.

Ice was allegedly created to protect the US from terrorism. But it seems the biggest threats it identifies are refugees and workers supporting their families. If you ask me, Ice is the one terrorising people.

Unfortunately, it has become even more aggressive in the past 18 months — and not just against people from Mexico and Central America.

The number of Haitians deported rose from 300 in 2016 to 5,500 in 2017 — as if almost the entire city of Aspen, Colorado were deported.

At this point, Ice’s targeting of families and non-threatening individuals makes it clear that it’s beyond reform.

Immigrants aren’t threats to the nation’s security — they’re people, just like you and me.

We need to find better ways to make sure our communities are safe without relying on a lawless, violent organisation. Ice must be abolished.

This article appeared first on peoplesworld.org.

OWNED BY OUR READERS

We're a reader-owned co-operative, which means you can become part of the paper too by buying shares in the People’s Press Printing Society.

 

 

Become a supporter

Fighting fund

You've Raised:£ 11,501
We need:£ 6,499
6 Days remaining
Donate today