Search This Blog

Translate

Blog Archive

Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Friday, June 16, 2017

RSN: Paul Gottinger | US Border Patrol Agents Conduct Military-Style Raid on Camp Delivering Medical Aid to Refugees Near US/Mexico Border





Reader Supported News
16 June 17
It's Live on the HomePage Now:
Reader Supported News

Sure, I'll make a donation!

FOCUS: Paul Gottinger | US Border Patrol Agents Conduct Military-Style Raid on Camp Delivering Medical Aid to Refugees Near US/Mexico Border
US Border Patrol agents arrest immigrants attempting to enter the US. (photo: ABC News)
Paul Gottinger, Reader Supported News
Gottinger writes: "On Thursday evening, 30 armed US Border Patrol agents, 15 trucks, 2 ATVs, and a helicopter were used to raid a humanitarian aid facility delivering medical treatment to refugees a few miles north of the Mexican border."
READ MORE


n Thursday evening, 30 armed US Border Patrol agents, 15 trucks, 2 ATVs, and a helicopter were used to raid a humanitarian aid facility delivering medical treatment to refugees a few miles north of the Mexican border. Border Patrol operations ended in the arrest of four people receiving medical attention in temperatures that soared to 105° Fahrenheit.
The camp, which is run by the Unitarian Universalist organization No More Deaths, stated that the raid was “an unprecedented show of force” and follows a pattern of increased surveillance of their humanitarian aid work since the beginning of the Trump administration.
The raid also violated a longstanding agreement between No More Deaths and US Border Patrol.
Under the Obama administration, Border Patrol made an agreement to treat the camp near Arivaca, Arizona, as a medical facility and to refrain from arresting immigrants receiving medical attention.
The agreement also stated that Border Patrol officers had to be trained in the Red Cross Code of Conduct and respect the independent mission of humanitarian organizations.
In a written statement, No More Deaths declared, “Obstruction of humanitarian aid is an egregious abuse by the law enforcement agency, a clear violation of international humanitarian law and a violation of the organization’s written agreement with the Tucson Sector Border Patrol.”
The intimidation and disruption of neutral humanitarian workers is typically a problem found in conflict zones and in countries with authoritarian governments. NGOs like the Red Cross have condemned foreign governments for attacks on health facilities abroad.
On Tuesday, Border Patrol agents began setting up checkpoints near their camp, conducting surveillance, and interrogating people leaving the camp about their citizenship status.
Border Patrol claims to have been tracking the individuals, but it waited until they arrived at the camp to arrest them.
A spokesman for No More Deaths told an Arizona paper the raid "feels like a direct and targeted attack on the humanitarian assistance we are providing during these hot and deadly days."
Border Control claims to have “reached out” to No More Deaths to “resolve the situation,” but they deemed those attempts unsuccessful and then served a warrant to search the camp.
In its statement, Border Patrol implies that it asked No More Deaths to turn over a number of people to them but that they refused.
Reader Supported News contacted US Border Patrol to ask whether it’s now their policy to detain people seeking medical care at the No More Death camp, but a representative with Border Control didn’t provide an answer.
It’s likely that many people traveling through the dangerous and remote desert near the aid camp had already avoided medical treatment for fear of deportation or incarceration in facilities that the Southern Poverty Law Center has described as inhumane.
The recent raid will likely scare even more people away from seeking treatment and very likely result in deaths. Since 1998, more than 7,000 people have died attempting to cross into the US, and 1,200 have gone missing just in the last year.
Eva Lewis, a volunteer at No More Deaths, told RSN, “Border Patrol tracked those they arrested yesterday for 18 miles before arresting them at our camp. They’re using No More Deaths camp as a trap.”
She continued, “The Border Patrol placed a sensor and camera just outside the camp. The Border Patrol needs to stand down and let us do our humanitarian work. As it stands, the camp is no longer a safe place for people to seek medical care.”
No More Deaths said, “The targeting of this critical medical aid is a shameful reflection of the current administration’s disregard for the lives of migrants and refugees, making an already dangerous journey even more deadly.”
No More Deaths released a report last year documenting how US Border Patrol uses the desert as a weapon to bring about the deaths and disappearances of thousands of migrants crossing into the US. The report says Border Control agents chase and scatter border crossers across the deadly deserts of the Southwest to create a “vast graveyard of the missing.”


Paul Gottinger is a staff reporter at RSN whose work focuses on the Middle East and the arms industry. He can be reached on Twitter @paulgottinger or via email.
Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.



Contribute to RSN
Become a Fan of RSN on Facebook and Twitter
Update My Monthly Donation








No comments: