Separating families
In case you missed it, immigration activist Elvira Arellano was arrested by USCIS officers last Sunday as she stepped out of her church sanctuary to participate in a press conference. Ms. Arellano has an 8 year-old, U.S. citizen child she has tried to protect and has used his citizenship as a basis for her petition to remain in the country. Immigration officials didn’t accept her argument and ordered her deported. She has been living in a church ever since refusing to surrender and speaking out about the separation of families by USCIS.
I was sad to hear this, but not surprised. What did surprise me was reading NOW’s press release on the matter. Apparently USCIS really does have a cruel streak, naming the operation to arrest Ms. Arellano “Return to Sender.”
NOW has called for a moratorium on these types of destructive raids:
CALL FOR MORATORIUM ON IMMIGRATION RAIDS
WHEREAS, the National Organization for Women (NOW) is a convener of the National Coalition for Immigrant Women’s Rights, an important collective of grassroots and advocacy organizations that promotes equality for all immigrant women and families living and working in the United States by advocating for comprehensive immigration reform, reproductive freedom and economic justice; and
WHEREAS, in 2006 NOW passed a resolution calling for fair immigration reform that supports provisions to improve wages and working conditions of immigrant workers, to protect them from exploitation, to preserve the provisions addressing violence against immigrant women and families in the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), and for a more efficient system to process those eligible to work and seek permanent residency/citizenship, one that excludes the building of fences, walls and prisons at the border; and
WHEREAS, tens of thousands of undocumented workers, many women, have been unfairly detained, terrorized, and arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) as part of a program dubbed “Operation Return to Sender,” that has separated hundreds of children from their mothers, who often were their only caretakers; and
WHEREAS, there has been a failure in Congress after two attempts to agree on a positive immigration reform, which could have addressed harsh employment practices, unfair policies, and the unjust, terrorizing raids and arrests that are tearing families apart; and
WHEREAS, immigration raids are targeting workers, typically immigrant women, based on their racial and ethnic appearance, accent or limited English skills; and
WHEREAS, ICE uses military-style tactics to terrorize communities, families, and workers by barging into homes and arresting residents, apprehending parents picking up their children from school, confronting immigrants about their legal status, raiding factories where many undocumented women work, and sweeping up workers and separating families by sending workers to inhumane detention centers that are scattered across the country; and
WHEREAS, the recent raid in New Bedford, Massachusetts, detained and arrested 360 undocumented workers, the majority women. They were taken into custody on March 6, 2007, after a raid by federal agents on the Michael Bianco Inc. factory, a military contractor 60 miles south of Boston. They were sent to detention in Texas which separated them from their children at home, including breast-fed babies. Many other children were stranded at day-care centers, schools, or homes of friends or relatives. This is only one of the thousands of stories of devastation;
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that the National Organization for Women calls for a moratorium to immediately halt the immigration raids that have been devastating families and our communities across the United States; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that in addition to this moratorium NOW calls for our government to: investigate allegations that detained individuals have been denied access to counsel, illegally interrogated, and subjected to abusive treatment; prohibit the separation of families with long, drawn out detentions; provide safe, appropriate and humane holding facilities; notify counsel and family members within 24 hours of transferring any detainee; halt transfers of those arrested by Department of Homeland Security; and afford detained workers who have been unfairly and illegally exploited at the raided places of employment a pathway to pursue labor claims against their employers; and
BE IT FINALLY RESOLVED, that NOW continues to recognize the contributions of immigrant women and a right to due process and fairness that will result in an equitable and fair immigration policy that provides legal and safe immigration options, a path to citizenship, reproductive freedom and economic justice.









January 29th, 2008 at 6:39 am
my wife and i have had a peaceful life in america. i am a natrualized citizen; my wife is not. but, she has paid into our federal social income for five years. she has paid benifits to hundres of US citizens and is consideed an illegal (she does not get a tax return b/c all her taxes go to social security). why be illegal when you pay taxes to legal citizens. she has paid benifits to line your pockects but is subjet to deportation. the laws are broken. this is coming from a citizen who has fought in conflits to defend this country. i have seen things that most US citizens would never take part in. i have seen friends blown to pieces only to worry that my family will be torn apart. my family has done everything to help our economy only to be redilculed by insecure, uneducated bigots who think that race should define this great country. this country was founded by great immagrants who sought a better life. why are we so caught up on race?