Indian ICE detainees on hunger strike receive forced hydration: lawyer

indica News Bureau-

 

Three Indian nationals seeking asylum in the U.S. have been forced to receive IV drips at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Texas as they approach their third week of a hunger strike, according to their attorney, and lawyers and activists who spoke with the men said they fear that force-feeding may be next.

The U.S. Department of Justice filed orders with federal judges last week that relate to non-consensual hydration or feeding for four men, according to a court official. Linda Corchado, the lawyer for three of the four men named in the court orders, said the fourth man is also Indian and is represented by another attorney. It hasn’t been made public if  that man was also forced to accept an IV, according to published reports.

The men have been detained for months, one for more than a year, and they are trying to appeal or reopen asylum claims that were denied, according to Corchado. As of Sunday, they had gone 20 days without food, she said, according to news media reports.

“My clients made the decision to begin a hunger strike to protest prolonged detention and what they believe were biased and discriminatory practices by the immigration court toward their cases,” Corchado said.

ICE confirmed that there were detainee hunger strikes at the federal government agency’s facilities in El Paso and Otero, New Mexico, late last week, but it did not comment on the claims of forced hydration or force-feeding.

“All ten ICE detainees have missed at least nine consecutive meals, triggering ICE hunger-strike protocols,” agency spokesman Timothy Oberle said in a statement, according to published reports.

“The ICE Health Services Corps (IHSC) is medically monitoring the detainees’ health and regularly updating ICE of their medical status. Efforts are being taken to protect the detainees’ health and privacy.” One of the hunger strikers in Otero was deported to India eight days into his hunger strike, according to Corchado. ICE does not confirm deportations.

Corchado, cited in published reports, said her three clients stopped eating while they were at the Otero immigration detention facility to protest their prolonged detention. After more than a week of hunger striking, they were transferred to the El Paso Processing Center, which is about 30 miles south of Otero, in West Texas.

One of the men told the Associated Press on Tuesday that he overheard medical staff say they were being transferred to El Paso for force-feeding.

On Thursday, Corchado met with her clients, who showed her IV equipment and needle pricks in their arms. She said they told her that medical staff showed them documents that they said were court orders for IV drips but didn’t give them copies, according to published reports. When the immigrants refused a protein-filled drink that would have effectively ended their hunger strikes, the medical staff started the IVs against their will, she said.

ICE did not immediately reply to a request for comment Sunday regarding the forced hydration.

The orders are sealed, and the court hearings are held in secret, according to reports. At least one of the judges, Frank Montalvo, has ordered force-feeding in the past.

In January, nine men were force-fed at the El Paso Processing Centre. Medical staff threaded tubes through their nostrils and down their throats before forcing a nutrient-rich liquid into their stomachs. ICE stopped the force-feeding in El Paso in February after a public outcry and a congressional inquiry. Two of the men were eventually released on bond. It has not been made public what happened to the other seven, according to news media reports.

The four men recently moved from Otero to El Paso are being held in the same room where the force-feeding took place, based on a description of the room given to the AP by one of the men, according to published reports.

Last week, one of the hunger strikers told the AP that he would resist receiving food until death, according to reports.

-“The practice of force-feeding while under ICE custody … is torturous and degrading,” Corchado said in a written statement to the AP. “(My clients) continue to make sound and well thought out decisions to refuse medical care and those decisions must be respected.”

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