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Urge
the U.S. Government to End Discriminatory Treatment of Haitian Asylum
Seekers Women at Risk: Unfair U.S. Laws Hurt Asylum Seekers To request hard copies of the report, please call 212 845-5259 Abstract from "The Welcome Mat Frays," a December 28th, 2002 NY Times editorial on the state of the U.S. asylum system
interested in protecting asylum -seekers and refugees in the United States. HRF has been advocating for refugees for two decades, and helping thousands to obtain asylum in the United States. Latest Issues Book Details Struggles in U.S. Asylum System Wave of Denials to Stop Refugee Crisis In Iraq Act Signed By President Bush Material Support Waiver Legislation Amicus Briefs Submitted to Supreme Court on Serious Crimes Bar Update: Detention - ICE Issues new Guidance on Parole of Asylum Seekers Material Support: Hmong and Montagnard Waivers Update: Material Support Settlement Announced in Hutto Litigation GAO Finds Lack of Phone Access for Detainees Iraqi Refugee Crisis New Study Reveals Disparities in Asylum Decisions Child Soldiers and Material Support Iraqi Refugees Face Hurdles in Search for Refuge Commission Issues "Report Card" on Asylum Reforms Material Support Update: Progress for Some Asylum Seekers; Process Still Unknown Asylum |
Asylum Protection News 16 Refugees Seeking Asylum Suffer Behind Bars: Read an executive summary of the report. “This is a truly groundbreaking report. It is the most comprehensive medical report to be issued on the detention of asylum seekers, and confirms what we have long known: detaining asylum seekers who have already survived torture, rape, imprisonment, or other persecution is wrong and harmful,” said Eleanor Acer, Director of the Asylum Program at Human Rights First. Under a draconian immigration law passed in 1996 and policies which have become ever more restrictive since September 11, 2001, asylum seekers arriving in the U.S. are subject to an “expedited removal” process in which they are automatically detained and rarely granted parole. The mental and physical health of many detainees suffers during this period of detention, which often lasts months if not years. The report confirms:
Background: In connection with the report, medical physicians experienced in working with asylum seekers interviewed 70 asylum seekers who were detained in detention facilities and jails in New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania – including the Wackenhut Detention Facility in Queens, New York and the Elizabeth (CCA) Detention Facility in Elizabeth, New Jersey. Many of the individuals who participated in the study are clients of legal assistance organizations, including Human Rights First and its volunteer pro bono lawyers. The majority of the detained asylum seekers who were interviewed – 77% – came from African countries. The median length of detention at the time the asylum seekers were interviewed was 4.7 months – with periods of detention ranging from 1 month to 4 and ½ years at the time of interview. For the 40 individuals who had been granted asylum (4 received other forms of protection, 14 had been denied asylum and 12 cases were still pending), the median length of detention was 7 months – with detention periods ranging from 2 months to 3 and ½ years. Jean Pierre Kamwa, a torture survivor who was detained in the U.S. for 5 months before he was granted asylum with the help of Human Rights First, now works as a counselor for refugees and asylum seekers. “These detainees have, like I had when I arrived in the U.S., already been deeply affected by what happened to them before they left their homes,” Kamwa said. “Now they are in a windowless detention center with no fresh air. They don’t know what will happen to them, if they will be deported, or if they will be allowed to remain. They become more and more depressed, sometimes they attempt suicide.” While this study was conducted in the U.S., the report’s findings are highly relevant to other countries that detain asylum seekers. U.S. detention practices are particularly egregious, and are clearly in violation of international law and the detention guidelines of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. The U.S. subjects arriving asylum seekers (in excess of 9000 last year) to mandatory detention, without giving them a chance to have a court decide if they really need to be detained. (Human Rights First, with the pro bono assistance of the law firm of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP, has conducted a comprehensive survey of the detention practices of countries around the world.) When an asylum seeker’s parole request is denied in the U.S., he or she cannot appeal that decision to a court or even to an immigration judge. “The INS – and now the new Department of Homeland Security – is basically judge and jailor when it comes to deciding whether an individual asylum seeker can be paroled from jail,” said Acer. Even asylum seekers who meet the parole criteria are denied parole by DHS. “This system, which was already so unfair, has become even more so with the transfer from INS to the new Department of Homeland Security.” Many asylum seekers now detained in the U.S. have family and friends residing in the U.S. and present absolutely no danger to security. In many cases, these are individuals who have been targeted for persecution based on religious practice, or because they stood up for democracy and human rights. Recommendations and Action: Human Rights First joins Physicians for Human Rights and the Bellevue/NYU Program for Survivors of Torture in calling for thorough reform to the U.S. asylum detention system. In particular, Human Rights First urges that the Department of Homeland Security, the Administration and the U.S. Congress:
Visit the Physicians for Human Rights
website for the full text of the report. We urge organizations that work with asylum seekers around the
U.S. to meet with local Department of Homeland Security officials and
their Congressional representatives to discuss this report, to raise any
concerns about the treatment of asylum seekers and to advocate for fair
parole policies and alternatives to detention for asylum seekers.
More information
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