As Ashcroft
Pushes Harsh Laws in Congress, a Pakistani Student From New York Is Beaten While
in INS Custody
Cracking Down on Immigrants—Again
by Alisa Solomon
Hasnain
was nervous about getting on an airplane in the week after hijackers rammed
jets into the World Trade Center and Pentagon, so instead of flying back to
New York to begin his new semester at CUNY's La Guardia College, the 20-year-old
Pakistani national decided to take the bus. On Tuesday night, September 18,
he boarded a Greyhound in Houston, where he had been visiting relatives. Early
Wednesday morning, border patrol guards from the Immigration and Naturalization
Service raided the bus and detained him on a visa violation. On Friday, the
aunt who had just bid him farewell was picking him up in New Orleans, and had
trouble recognizing her nephew's fine features beneath the bruises and swelling
that distorted his face.
Apparently
President Bush's admonitions against attacking Arab and Muslim immigrants (and
those mistaken for them) have not penetrated government-run institutions. While
in the custody of the INS—and being held in Stone County Correctional Facility
in Wiggins, Mississippi—Hasnain was brutally beaten by three white inmates he
describes as "huge." Calling him Bin Laden and threatening to kill him, the
men punched his face, banged his head against the wall, and stomped on his back.
They stripped him naked and belted his buttocks with a shoe. A week after the
assault, Hasnain still couldn't hear out of his left ear or eat solid food because
of the pain in his jaw. His tongue was swollen and a foot-long bruise snaked
along his back.
While
Hasnain's experience is the most extreme to have surfaced so far, immigrant
advocates around the country are increasingly alarmed by reports of violence,
harassment, and the draconian application of immigration laws against INS detainees
from countries in the Middle East, North Africa, and South Asia.
With
hundreds of immigrants rounded up for questioning in the last two weeks, serious
concerns about civil liberties have been raised on the right and the left. But
the INS was hardly going easy on immigrants before. There were 20,000 people
in INS detention prior to September 11, and attorneys worry that the predicament
of many of them will now get even worse. Moreover, they see the very statutes
and structures they have long decried as allowing for cruel treatment of immigrants
being aggressively exploited now and even exacerbated. They fear that punishing
new laws proposed by Attorney General Ashcroft will further overwhelm the system,
violate human rights, and destroy families, without achieving any significant
new protections against terrorism.
After
all, that is exactly what happened after Timothy McVeigh blew up the federal
building in Oklahoma City. Though McVeigh was a homegrown terrorist, the Newt
Gingrich-led Congress in 1996 responded to his act by passing a series of "anti-terrorist"
immigration statutes—laws so severe that some of them were modified by the Supreme
Court. "After the '96 laws, we didn't think things could get any worse," says
Cheryl Little, executive director of the Florida Immigrant Advocacy Center (FIAC).
"But they just did."
As
a result of the '96 laws, the number of INS detainees skyrocketed, making immigrants
the fastest-growing segment of America's exploding jail population. Human rights
groups issued report after report denouncing the Kafkaesque nature of the new
laws. Not only did the laws mandate the detention of asylum seekers arriving
in the U.S. without documents, they also widened the definition of what constitutes
a felony and then, applying the law retroactively, required the deportation
and mandatory detention of immigrants who had committed such offenses. Thus,
otherwise law-abiding legal residents who had committed minor nonviolent crimes—even
some who had served out sentences for them decades before—got knocks on the
door from INS officials out of the blue, were served with deportation orders,
and locked up.
In
recent months, it looked like the excesses of 1996 were finally being reined
in. The Supreme Court ruled in June that the government may not imprison immigrants
indefinitely, that legal residents are entitled to have their cases reviewed
by a court before facing deportation, and that new deportation rules could not
be applied retroactively. Meanwhile, various bills were pending in Congress
to overturn some of the harshest measures of the '96 laws. And after Mexican
president Vicente Fox's triumphant tour of the U.S. last month, it even seemed
likely that progressive new policies would be implemented to help thousands
of undocumented families regularize their status.
But
on September 18, Ashcroft introduced emergency measures that extended from 24
to 48 hours the time the INS can hold someone without charges—and that even
allow for holding immigrants indefinitely "in the event of emergency or other
extraordinary circumstance."
The
sweeping package of fresh "anti-terrorism" legislation that the Justice Department
is sending to Congress also tries to exploit little loopholes in the Supreme
Court rulings of June. Among other things, it would allow the attorney general
to lock up immigrants suspected even of tenuous association with "terrorist"
organizations and order them deported without presenting any evidence. What
is more, there would be extremely limited opportunities for immigrants to appeal.
"The government may need some expanded powers," says Jeanne Butterfield, executive
director of the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA), "but the law
has to provide protection against mistake and abuse. That's why we have judicial
review and evidentiary standards. If suspicion and fear are enough grounds to
lock people up forever, that makes us a police state."
Though
not yet in a final version, the draft legislation defines terrorism so broadly,
says Butterfield, that throwing a rock through a window could fall into the
category. It also expands the government's ability to use secret evidence in
deportation hearings—even as various courts around the country have been ruling
that deporting someone for reasons he or she cannot know, and thus cannot defend
against, is unjust.
Those
caught up in what Butterfield calls the "never-never land of immigration detention"
are already denied any legal protections that belong to citizens. Though they
have a right to an attorney, for instance, that right is not guaranteed, as
it is in criminal proceedings, so the state does not supply counsel. Even those
lucky enough to have funds to hire an attorney, or to be among the small percentage
served by the many pro bono organizations around the country, are now allegedly
finding their access impeded.
Lawyers
in Texas, New Jersey, Ohio, Minnesota, and elsewhere have complained of being
turned away when they attempted to visit clients in the week following September
11. (Non-attorney visits were reportedly limited as well. Sister Pietrina Raccuglia
of Cabrini Immigrant Services in New York reports that the Sunday services attended
by some 75 detainees at the Varick Street INS facility in Manhattan were abruptly
and indefinitely suspended by INS officials in the wake of the attacks.) INS
spokesperson Karen Kraushaar says that there was "absolutely no directive" from
Washington to limit anyone's access after the twin towers attacks; she insists
that the agency's regular policy, which allows registered attorneys to visit
during posted hours, was maintained.
Reports
from other detention centers—including the facility near Newark airport in Elizabeth,
New Jersey—suggest that Arab and Muslim detainees were separated from the general
population after September 11 for their own protection. Again, Kraushaar says
there was no national order for such segregation. Authorities in Elizabeth did
not return calls requesting comment.
Clearly
nobody thought about protecting Hasnain when he was locked in a cell full of
criminal inmates in Mississippi. Still so traumatized from the battering that
he requested his last name not be used, Hasnain was found to have overstayed
his visa when border patrol agents raided his bus early on Wednesday morning
in Mobile, Alabama. He had left his home in Karachi two years ago with a tourist
visa, he says, "to escape the violence there."
Living
with friends of the family in Coney Island, he completed Hillcrest High School
and then took a year of courses at Queensborough Community College. He was looking
forward to transferring to La Guardia, where he planned to major in computer
information systems. "I love New York, the pace of it," he says. "And there
are so many opportunities there."
But
instead of returning to classes, Hasnain was handcuffed, thrown in a van with
six Mexicans, and taken directly to jail in Mississippi. When he went to a pay
phone to call his aunt, the first inmate came up and punched him in the face,
breaking his front tooth. "Then another man joined him, and they were both holding
me down and hitting me," he says. "Somehow I managed to reach a bell that was
in the dorm. I pressed the button, and a lady's voice came on the speaker. I
begged her, 'Please, I'm getting beaten up. Please, help me.' They were banging
my head on the bars and hammering me, and my ear began to bleed. I told them
I had nothing to do with Bin Laden, but they said, 'Too bad. You're Pakistani.
That's close enough.' I thought I was going to die."
Hasnain
estimates the assault lasted some 25 minutes, though he says it's hard to gauge
because he went in and out of consciousness. When some guards finally arrived,
he says, "They just stood there. They did not run up to me or try to end it."
Hasnain wriggled free and ran to them. He asked to go to a hospital. They took
him to the prison nurse, who gave him an ice pack and two Motrin tablets. Then
he was moved to a chilly cell in solitary, where after repeated requests he
was given a sheet.
Meanwhile,
his aunt Erum (who also requested that her last name be withheld), was waiting
anxiously in New Orleans. Hasnain had been allowed to call her from Mobile,
where he was told he'd be taken to the INS regional headquarters in the Louisiana
city. Erum had contacted a lawyer, scraped together the $5000 bond that had
been set, and grabbed the first flight from Houston. Once in New Orleans, she
was told by an INS official that Hasnain was being held in Wiggins and would
be brought to Louisiana in the morning. But when he did not arrive on Thursday,
she called the Mississippi jail, where an officer told her he'd "had a little
schoolyard fight."
That
day, the INS told her it would take a few days to bring his file west, so they
couldn't promise when he'd arrive. She rented a car and drove nearly three hours
to Wiggins. At the jail, a guard told her if she wanted to see her nephew she'd
have to come back on visiting day—Sunday. "I begged him," she says, "but he
said he'd lose his job if he let me in. I wrote a note, and crying, I begged
him to give it to Hasnain." She drove back to New Orleans and waited.
Around
11 p.m., Hasnain was permitted to call his aunt, but he sounded strange to her:
He called Erum by her first name instead of by the honorifics Pakistanis typically
use for their elders, and remained silent when she asked if he'd been in a fight.
But that, it turns out, was one of the conditions under which Hasnain was allowed
to phone her at all: He was instructed that he must speak English, that the
call would be made on a speakerphone with several guards present, and that if
he mentioned being beaten, they'd hang up at once. (Hasnain's attorney, Mary
Howell, has called for an investigation of the attack as a hate crime. The FBI
in New Orleans made preliminary inquiries, and the investigation, says Howell,
has been turned over to a local assistant U.S. attorney, Jack Lacy. Lacy says
he cannot comment on a pending investigation—and that by saying so, he neither
confirms nor denies that such an investigation is taking place. Major Charles
Gardner of the Stone County Correctional Facility declined comment. Local INS
authorities said they could not comment on any particular case.)
It
wasn't until Friday at almost 2 p.m. that officers came to take Hasnain to New
Orleans, where he was released on bond and his immigration hearing set for October
25. Howell worries that Hasnain may be deported before a criminal prosecution
can be completed—and that the Mexican witnesses may be deported as well. Meanwhile,
a possible civil suit is in the works.
Complaints
of mistreatment of recent INS detainees are being voiced by advocates around
the country. Texas attorney Paul Zoltan notes that a Saudi national he is representing
was put in a county jail where for days he was denied a mattress, a blanket,
and a drinking cup. Because he was not allowed access to a timepiece of any
kind, the client, a Muslim, could not know when it was time to pray. (Zoltan
emphasizes that the fault is with the county jail—which he declined to name
out of concern for his client's safety—and not with the INS itself. Still, critics
have long objected to the lack of oversight the agency exercises when it farms
out detainees to so many jails.)
In
Minnesota, an Egyptian national taken in on a visa violation two weeks ago was
taunted so relentlessly by other detainees that he refused meals rather than
face them. As his U.S.-citizen wife, Eman Abdelall, puts it, "Of all the names
in the world, his would have to be Ossama." It took a week of begging—and a
story in the local press—before he was moved to a separate unit.
But
his attorney, Audrey Carr, wonders why he was detained at all. Abdelall's infringement
is one of those technicalities for which, under normal circumstances, the INS
would not pursue him, says Carr. She surmises that he's being held only because
he's Egyptian, even though there are no allegations that he has any ties to
any terrorist groups. Carr says that INS functionaries have unofficially told
her as much.
Anecdotes
like these, charging that detainees from the Middle East are not to be released
under any circumstances, are pouring into attorney associations, but the INS's
Kraushaar insists there is no basis to them. "Rumors don't help this situation,"
she says. "Yes, we are on heightened alert, but there is no directive to change
the case-by-case basis on which bonds are set."
Even
so, the situation troubles advocates like attorney Niels Frenzen, who represented
Iraqi nationals in a notorious case in which the government used secret evidence.
"The existing laws that allow for deportation or removal of anyone suspected
of being a terrorist are perfectly adequate," he says. "What these laws really
do is give the government a way to go after people against whom they have no
evidence whatsoever of criminal culpability. That means going after them because
of their nationality, religion, or race. And that is terrifying."
The
INS's Kraushaar rejects this reasoning. "We are not the gestapo," she says.
"This is the United States, where liberty and freedom are prized. We are not
about to round people up on the basis of national origin." There are no plans
to require all nationals of particular states to report to INS offices for fingerprinting
and photographs—as was required of Iranian nationals during the Iran hostage
crisis, Kraushaar says. And even though the Justice Department has among its
many seemingly far-fetched contingency plans a Reagan-era protocol for mass
detention and deportation, even the anxious advocates are not invoking the specter
of internment camps. "I wouldn't want to paint the current legislation as pointing
that way," says AILA's Butterfield. "But given our shameful history and some
of the contingency plans I've seen, I think we have to be very watchful."
As
for Hasnain, he's staying with his aunt in Houston for a while and will maybe
pick up his studies at La Guardia next semester. He can't really say. "I'm very,
very afraid now," he says. "I'm not sure what to do." He had been planning to
take advantage of the new changes coming about in immigration policy to regularize
his status. "I heard there were some new laws coming up," he says. "I was hoping
to be part of them."
taken with permission
from www.villagevoice.com
Date/Time Last Modified: 6/17/2002 3:36:39 PM
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