Migrant Caravan Asylum Seekers Allege Serious Mistreatment In Immigration Jail
A group of men—including some who participated in the so-called migrant caravan—issued a statement Thursday morning listing the “abuses and mistreatment” they claim they’re facing at the immigrant detention center where they’re currently being held.
The letter makes serious allegations about labor and safety conditions inside the Otay Mesa Detention Center, near San Diego. Otay Mesa is run by CoreCivic, the country’s biggest operator of private prisons.
“They force us to work for 6 hours for a payment of $1.50,” reads the letter, which is signed by 37 detainees.
The letter was translated from Spanish into English and sent to Splinter by Pueblo Sin Fronteras, the organization that organized the migrant caravan.
Among other complaints, it alleges that, though detainees are nominally allowed to decline work, in practice, things are much different:
We continue declaring that when they offer us voluntary work in CCA, we accept it due to the fact that our economic situation is precarious because we came fleeing from our country and CCA sees our situation and exploits us in the following way:
They force us to work for 6 hours for a payment of $1.50
They threaten to report us to judges when we don’t want to work
They threaten with marking us up to damage our cases
Otay Mesa is already facing a class-action lawsuit that alleges that immigrants “are paid at most $1.50 per day, and sometimes not paid at all, for their work as kitchen staff, janitors, barbers and various other roles,” according to the Los Angeles Times.
CoreCivic is also facing a lawsuit from detainees in Georgia who allege that the company forced them to work and paid them between $1 and $4 per day.
The detainees in the letter claim they have reported concerns about “dirty razors” and medical concerns that have gone unanswered.
The letter also expresses outrage about the death of Roxana Hernández, a transgender asylum seeker who was also part of the migrant caravan: