3:13 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration · Comments Off
5 Dec 2008
I have spoken often about how I think that the ICE deportation program exposes more about our system in the U.S. than simply the broken immigration system, namely our broken prison system. This essay by a brother of a deported gang member really speaks to that problem:
This October 31st, I – along with a big group of people – protested in front of the San Francisco ICE office, with the purpose of stopping the raids happening in Sanctuary Cities, such as San Francisco and Oakland. It was one of the first major protests I have attended and I felt proud to be out there making a stand for all immigrants who are being treated unjustly. Again, I know that Frank committed a serious crime but I believe it is unfair that my brother is being deported, because it does not solve anything, there are still gangs in El Salvador. If someone does a crime make them do their time, but do not move them far away from their families, it not only hurts them but their families as well.
The last time I talked to him on the phone, was about four days before he was deported. He sounded like the same Frank I knew. When I asked him if he was going to still be in a gang after all that happened he simply said “no.” None of his gang friends visited him during the time he was in jail. One of his friends did write letters to him. All the people in his gang that were his “family” never visited him. On the other hand, his mother, sisters, my dad, my brothers and I visited him every chance we had. Now he is alone in El Salvador, because his only family is here.
3:46 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Politics · Comments Off
19 Nov 2008
Regardless of what you think of undocumented immigration, I think we can all admit that there’s some serious problems surrounding the issue of ‘immigration’ here in the U.S.. But what may be more difficult to admit to is the problems with incarceration in the U.S. that immigration exposes. Take, for example, the following gut-wrenching story of a little boy who was separated from his mother after an ICE raid:
Lopez, who immigrated illegally from Mexico with his family when he was 3, said it has been torturous waiting to know what would happen to his mother, Consuelo Vega Nava.
After her arrest officials transferred her to a federal prison in Leavenworth, Kan., and then later to a Florida facility before her deportation to Mexico.
Lopez, who has not seen his mother since May 12, said he will be reunited with her when he returns to Mexico next month.
“I’ve missed those days when me and my mom would just walk or go get an ice cream,” he said. “I don’t want this to be forgotten.”
The practice of moving imprisoned people away from their families is not a new or unusual practice. It, in my opinion, is an illegal and immoral practice, one that the U.S. should be ashamed of participating in. Punishing through incarceration is one thing, punishing through denial of family is something else all together. The denial of access to family is what the dictatorships we abhor so much do.
If we can’t agree on immigration as a whole, let’s agree on the treatment of imprisoned people. Family integrity should be respected as much as possible for ALL imprisoned people. Period.
8:27 am By Maegan La Mala · Controversia| Justice| honduras| society · 1 Comment
8 Aug 2008Amid international outrage and diplomatic pressure, the state of Texas has put to death yet another undocumented immigrant who was allegedly denied his right to see consular officials after arrest.
Earlier this week Mexican national José Medellín was executed, and last night Honduran national Heliberto Chi was put to death at Huntsville Prison. Al Jazeera reports:
Heliberto Chi, 29, was pronounced dead at 23:25 GMT after receiving a lethal injection at a death chamber in Huntsville, the Texas department of criminal justice said in a statement on Thursday.
The execution took place after the US Supreme Court rejected his final appeal.
Chi, who was living in the US illegally, shot his former boss dead and wounded a colleague in 2001 during a robbery in the Texan city of Dallas.
The New York Times reports that Chi’s last words were “God forgive them, receive my spirit.”
Via / Al Jazeera
4:09 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Controversia| States| TV · Comments Off
13 Jul 2006
Spanish-speaking prisoners in Utah are up in arms because they’ve been robbed of something vital to their peace of mind: Univision telenovelas.
An outburst among inmates over a decision to pull the plug on steamy Spanish-language soaps and talk shows resulted in a lockdown at Logan’s Cache County Jail.After getting numerous complaints about the raunchy shows and inmates hogging the television, jail commanders decided Tuesday to pull the Spanish-language TV channel Univision from the cable line-up pumped into the jail’s 15 common area TVs.
“It was dividing the inmates,” said Cache County Sheriff’s Lt. Brian Locke. “Some wanted to watch it, some didn’t want to watch it and it just got worse and worse and it all came back to that channel.”
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.
About | Advertise with us | Contact | Twitter