Martin O'Malley
Related: About this forumMartin O’Malley Just Met With Hunger Strikers To Prove A Point About Immigrant Detention.
Over the last two months, hundreds of immigrant detainees have gone on hunger strikes across the nation to protest their prolonged detention. Not many people have noticed. And despite the fact that many of the detainees are seeking asylum in the United States because theyre afraid of being persecuted if theyre returned, politicians have yet to make changes to the conditions at detention facilities.
Thats why Democratic presidential candidate and former Maryland Gov. Martin OMalley personally met with former hunger strikers and their family members on Tuesday in an attempt to elevate the issue of immigrant detention.
OMalley met with two hunger strikers, Mohammad Aminul Islam and Sumon Ahmed, who are Bangladeshi nationals affiliated with the Bangladesh National Party, the countrys second largest political party. They were among the first wave of 54 detainees to launch a hunger strike at immigration detention facilities back in October.
All of the men on hunger strike were approved for their credible fear findings, a preliminary step in the asylum review process. The ICE agency established policies in 2010 stating that asylum seekers who pass their credible fear interview should be automatically considered for parole from detention. Nonetheless, some of the hunger strikers have been held in immigration detention anywhere between nine months and two years, even though the average detention time hovers around 31 days.
The detainees told OMalley that the only memorable part of their detention was the one to two hours that we got to spend outside. Only 19 of those detainees had lawyers, according to an immigrant advocate.
OMalley ended the meeting by criticizing immigration detention, stating that instead of giving them due process, were just rolling out more barbed wire, according to Reform Immigration for America, an immigrant advocacy group present at the meeting.
OMalleys meeting is significant given that families have yet to meet with other Democratic presidential candidates, all of whom support lenient immigration policies for undocumented immigrants and limited immigration detention for immigrants.
On Monday, families of detainees on hunger strike held large banners reading People are starving for their freedom and Do you stand with us? when Democratic presidential candidate frontrunner Hillary Clinton spoke at the National Immigrant Integration Conference in New York. Just the previous week, families of detainees protested outside her Brooklyn, New York headquarters, calling on her to respond to the fast.
Clintons Latino outreach director, Lorella Praeli, met with protesters last week to voice support for their cause. Arturo Carmona, the Latino outreach director for Sen. Bernie Sanders, also supported the hunger strikers in a statement, noting, Sen. Sanders immigration platform promotes alternatives to detention, closes private prisons and would allow thousands of non-violent immigrant detainees to reunite with their families as they wait for their day in court.
OMalley has been aggressively pro-immigrant in his campaign, even going to Arizona last week to protest the shameful practices of Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, known for his anti-immigrant positions and blatant use of racial profiling.
Though OMalley is now meeting with former detainees, there are many more immigrants in similar circumstances who are still in detention. As of the end of last week, at least 109 immigrant detainees were still on hunger strike in Alabama, California, Colorado, Texas, and New York. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) guidelines have set a guideline acknowledging fasts or strikes only after detainees refuse nine consecutive meals.
A federal judge recently authorized U.S. immigration authorities to perform involuntary blood draws and other medical procedures on at least ten male detainees from Bangladesh who began fasting on December 2 at the Krome Service Processing Center in Miami, Florida, the Associated Press reported.
http://thinkprogress.org/immigration/2015/12/15/3732081/martin-omalley-immigrants-hunger-strike/