News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Group Urges More Monitoring Of Border Abuses |
Title: | US CA: Group Urges More Monitoring Of Border Abuses |
Published On: | 1998-05-20 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-07 09:44:04 |
GROUP URGES MORE MONITORING OF BORDER ABUSES
Immigration: Amnesty International says it found 'credible evidence' of
mistreatment of migrants by the Border Patrol and other U.S. agencies.
SAN DIEGO--In its first broad look at human rights along the U.S.-Mexico
border, Amnesty International is urging the U.S. government to create
civilian watchdog committees to monitor complaints about alleged abuses by
Border Patrol agents and other immigration officers.
The rights group said in a 56-page report made public Tuesday that it found
"credible evidence" of a wide range of mistreatment by U.S. agents, from
beatings and sexual abuse of suspected undocumented immigrants to
withholding food, water and medical care during extended periods. Migrants
seeking to report mistreatment face a confusing complaint process and some
Border Patrol stations do not stock complaint forms in Spanish, the group said.
"The allegations of ill-treatment Amnesty International collected include
people being struck with batons, fists and feet, often as punishment for
attempting to run away from Border Patrol agents," said the report, based on
a three-week tour along the border from California to Texas last fall.
The organization said a crackdown on illegal immigration and drug smuggling
into the United States in recent years, sending hundreds of new Border
Patrol agents and U.S. military units along sections of the 2,000-mile
border, had increased chances for detainees' rights to be violated.
But a spokeswoman for the Immigration and Naturalization Service said rights
violations are "not common." Spokeswoman Virginia Kice said the report
ignored some steps that the agency has taken in terms of training and
internal policing to prevent them.
"Any instance of abuse is one too many and will not be tolerated," Kice said.
Kice said a number of informal community boards have sprouted along the
border, providing the INS with local input on potential problems though not
overseeing how complaints are handled. "We have made a concerted and sincere
effort to address some of the concerns raised in the Amnesty International
report," Kice said.
The study's release was timed to coincide with the anniversary of the fatal
shooting last May 20 of Esequiel Hernandez Jr., an 18-year-old goatherd, by
a member of a Marine surveillance team looking for drug smugglers on the
border southeast of El Paso. A federal grand jury later declined to indict
Cpl. Clemente Banuelos after concluding that he thought that he was
protecting a fellow serviceman when he shot Hernandez.
The Amnesty study was sprinkled with anecdotes of alleged abuses culled
largely from news stories, reports by other groups and charges raised
previously by immigrant-rights advocates. The group said it hoped to apply
international human-rights standards to border enforcement and prod the
Immigration and Naturalization Service to improve training and procedures
for detention and complaints.
"Nice-sounding noises in Washington don't always translate into reforms in
the field," said Nicholas Rizza, the group's national refugee coordinator in
San Francisco.
Among the recommendations was the proposed creation of citizen panels,
similar to local police commissions, to monitor the handling of complaints
before the INS and Justice Department--and even launch their own
investigations, if necessary. That suggestion was part of a package of
recommendations made last year by a separate citizens panel set up by the
INS in 1994 to examine its practices.
Copyright Los Angeles Times
Checked-by: Melodi Cornett
Immigration: Amnesty International says it found 'credible evidence' of
mistreatment of migrants by the Border Patrol and other U.S. agencies.
SAN DIEGO--In its first broad look at human rights along the U.S.-Mexico
border, Amnesty International is urging the U.S. government to create
civilian watchdog committees to monitor complaints about alleged abuses by
Border Patrol agents and other immigration officers.
The rights group said in a 56-page report made public Tuesday that it found
"credible evidence" of a wide range of mistreatment by U.S. agents, from
beatings and sexual abuse of suspected undocumented immigrants to
withholding food, water and medical care during extended periods. Migrants
seeking to report mistreatment face a confusing complaint process and some
Border Patrol stations do not stock complaint forms in Spanish, the group said.
"The allegations of ill-treatment Amnesty International collected include
people being struck with batons, fists and feet, often as punishment for
attempting to run away from Border Patrol agents," said the report, based on
a three-week tour along the border from California to Texas last fall.
The organization said a crackdown on illegal immigration and drug smuggling
into the United States in recent years, sending hundreds of new Border
Patrol agents and U.S. military units along sections of the 2,000-mile
border, had increased chances for detainees' rights to be violated.
But a spokeswoman for the Immigration and Naturalization Service said rights
violations are "not common." Spokeswoman Virginia Kice said the report
ignored some steps that the agency has taken in terms of training and
internal policing to prevent them.
"Any instance of abuse is one too many and will not be tolerated," Kice said.
Kice said a number of informal community boards have sprouted along the
border, providing the INS with local input on potential problems though not
overseeing how complaints are handled. "We have made a concerted and sincere
effort to address some of the concerns raised in the Amnesty International
report," Kice said.
The study's release was timed to coincide with the anniversary of the fatal
shooting last May 20 of Esequiel Hernandez Jr., an 18-year-old goatherd, by
a member of a Marine surveillance team looking for drug smugglers on the
border southeast of El Paso. A federal grand jury later declined to indict
Cpl. Clemente Banuelos after concluding that he thought that he was
protecting a fellow serviceman when he shot Hernandez.
The Amnesty study was sprinkled with anecdotes of alleged abuses culled
largely from news stories, reports by other groups and charges raised
previously by immigrant-rights advocates. The group said it hoped to apply
international human-rights standards to border enforcement and prod the
Immigration and Naturalization Service to improve training and procedures
for detention and complaints.
"Nice-sounding noises in Washington don't always translate into reforms in
the field," said Nicholas Rizza, the group's national refugee coordinator in
San Francisco.
Among the recommendations was the proposed creation of citizen panels,
similar to local police commissions, to monitor the handling of complaints
before the INS and Justice Department--and even launch their own
investigations, if necessary. That suggestion was part of a package of
recommendations made last year by a separate citizens panel set up by the
INS in 1994 to examine its practices.
Copyright Los Angeles Times
Checked-by: Melodi Cornett
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