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HispanicVista Guest Columnists |
For the Hispanic community, which constantly suffers the consequences of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) activities, recent revelations by the Washington Post—that ICE officials have set quotas for deportation of undocumented immigrants, without consideration for the circumstances of those they’re removing from the country—come as no surprise. Latinos who live in some of the most remote parts of the country can describe with despair how they’ve seen the Hispanic population of their communities reduced by ICE’s actions and the horrific consequences of the deportation policies they enforce, such as 287(g) and Secure Communities. Before the Obama
Administration, in the summer of 2008, in There, deportations have persisted under the 287(g) program—with gross abuses to its intent. “It’s not just being used to deport criminals, but all kinds of people. It’s an abuse,” Eric Esquivel, publisher of the bilingual magazine La Isla (which is printed in the area), told me. The reality is that despite the modifications ICE made last year to its memorandum of understanding with local police departments under 287(g), as part of the Obama administration’s new policy to prioritize deporting real criminals, local agents are continuing to put immigrant workers with no criminal records into deportation proceedings. But the situation in the highest levels of the federal bureaucracy is no different; take, for example, the internal memo from ICE’s Detention and Removal Office (DRO) dated February 22nd, which clearly presents a deportation quota of 250,000 noncriminal immigrants a year. The DRO’s philosophy appears not to have changed since 2003, when then-director Anthony Tangeman signed his name to Operation Endgame, a strategic plan to deport all undocumented immigrants over a ten-year period. ICE director John Morton’s clarification that his agency does not set quotas is irrelevant. The numbers speak for themselves. Homeland Security Secretary
Janet Napolitano herself said last August 11th in Later, DHS reported that deportations had increased 46% under the Obama Administration. These were activists’
complaints when they met with the president in the
White House before this month’s march in By “coincidence,” the same day that the president met with Latino activists—and only 28 miles away--ICE’s “cowboys” conducted a pair of raids that resulted in the arrest of 29 humble restaurant employees. |