Your Web News in One Place

Help Webnuz

Referal links:

Sign up for GreenGeeks web hosting
December 19, 2018 03:33 pm PST

Molly Crabapple's illustrated report from the immigration detention Gulags of Texas

The intrepid and brilliant artist and journalist Molly Crabapple (previously) traveled to the immigration detention centers of the Rio Grande and interviewed and sketched the people she met there.

Crabapple's report is wrenching, a vision of "daily cruelty and heartache" where children are no longer ripped from their parents, but instead, families are imprisoned in frigid, bare-concrete cells called "hieleras" (iceboxes), denied medical care (including care for ill children), and humiliated and abused.

This alphabet soup of agencies does not make it easy for the media or anyone else to witness the detention centers and courtrooms that process the humans who cross the border. Officers withheld information from me about rules for visiting facilities, and presented elaborate, shifting requirements for access. On my first day reporting, I had permission to visit the Port Isabel Detention Center in Los Fresnos, where detainees work in the cafeteria and scrub toilets for $1 a day (a can of coke at the commissary costs $1.75). Port Isabels record of human rights complaints stretches back years; in 2010, inmates launched hunger strikes over medical neglect and the lack of legal aid, and a former guard wrote a memoir detailing the facilitys history of corruption and abuse, comparing it to Guantanamo Bay.

When a friend drove me up the unpaved detour road and past the barbed wire fences to the gate at Port Isabel, the guard said my friend wasnt even allowed to drop me off since her name wasnt on the list. Nor could I walk.

Read the rest


Original Link: http://feeds.boingboing.net/~r/boingboing/iBag/~3/UPXiDjoJi_s/kafka-was-an-optimist.html

Share this article:    Share on Facebook
View Full Article