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From: "Salam Radio" <SalamRadio@wideopenwest.com>
Date: 2004/08/24 Tue PM 05:21:59 GMT
To: <Undisclosed-Recipient:@ms1.netsolmail.com;>
Subject: Gulag in New York, Jail Run by Private Contractors Hidden
from Public
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New York Daily News
Thursday, August 19th, 2004
200 locked away & under the radar
There is a little gulag in New York City. And it is nothing to be
proud of.
Its name is the Wackenhut Detention Center, and more than 200 human
beings -
men and women - languish ignored within its walls. Yet most New
Yorkers have
never heard about it.
The situation of the people inside the privately run immigration
maximum-security jail is so hopeless that on Monday, 175 of the
imprisoned
men resorted to a desperate measure: They went on a hunger strike.
"Nobody is eating," said Makham Singh in a telephone interview. An
immigrant
from India in his 30s, Singh has a wife and two children who are
American
citizens. He has been in Wackenhut for six months.
"They bring us food and we send it back," added Singh.
The Wackenhut prison is a converted warehouse building with no windows
in
the middle of a warehouse district in Springfield Gardens, Queens.
It is drab and anonymous and out of the way, which works out well for
keeping the men and women imprisoned in it out of New York's
collective
consciousness.
But the detainees are determined to do whatever it takes to let
everybody
know about the prison and what goes on inside it.
"We need people to know about our situation," Singh said. "We must be
heard,
and we will starve if we have to."
The strikers' demands are nothing if not fair. They are asking for the
right
to be treated humanely, the right to due process and appropriate
medical
care, the review of their cases and the immediate release of all
noncriminal
prisoners so they can be reunited with their families.
Many of the Wackenhut prisoners - people from all over the world -
have been
deprived of freedom for years even though no terrorism-related or
other
criminal charges have been brought against any of them.
"Yet they are locked up 23 hours per day, and several have been there
a year
or more," said Bobby Khan, a member of the Coney Island Avenue
Project, a
group based in the Pakistani community in Brooklyn that advocates for
the
rights of imprisoned immigrants.
"Most of them were picked up in the aftermath of 9/11 and have been
held
without criminal charges or due process and, in some cases, without
access
to a lawyer," Khan added. "The food is insufficient and inadequate,
and even
though some of the detainees have heart conditions or suffer from
diabetes
and ulcers, medical care is practically nonexistent."
Like Singh, several of the detainees - all of them confined for
alleged
immigration violations - are married to U.S. citizens and have
American
children. Yet the government refuses to release information about
their
status or what their future might be - even though few, if any, of the
immigrant detentions since 9/11 have yielded any useful results for
President Bush's "war on terror."
Shameful as it is, the misfortune of these immigrants and their
families is
just one more opportunity for big profits for Wackenhut, the private
corporation running the jail under contract with the federal
government.
"For example, the food they are given is so bad and so little that
detainees
have to buy cafeteria food," Singh said.
Inmates receive one dollar a day for work they do within the prison
walls.
Pretty low stuff in anybody's book.
Yes, there is a little gulag in New York City. It is located in Queens
and
its name is the Wackenhut Detention Center. And everybody should know
about
the more than 200 human beings languishing behind its walls.
http://www.nydailynews.com/boroughs/story/223389p-191946c.html
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