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WITNESSES: IMMIGRATION’S IOWA RAID SMASHES FAMILIES, TOWN
Friday, July 25, 2008
(PAI)WITNESSES: IMMIGRATION’S IOWA RAID SMASHES
FAMILIES, TOWN
By Mark
Gruenberg
PAI Staff
Writer
WASHINGTON (PAI)--The Immigration and Customs
Enforcement agency’s now-infamous raid on the
nation’s biggest kosher meat processing
plant, Agriprocessors of Postville, Iowa,
smashed families and the town, witnesses told
Congress on July
24.
But the GOP Bush regime’s raid, which rounded
up 390 workers, is part of a pattern of ICE
actions targeted almost solely at workers, they
added at both the congressional hearing and an
informal press conference
afterwards.
ICE agents swooped in at 10 a.m. on May 12,
surrounding the plant with agents and
helicopters. The workers, virtually all
with Spanish-sounding surnames, were taken to a
cattle-processing facility miles away.
ICE said it had warrants for 697
workers.
The workers, many of whom spoke either Spanish
or Mayan, got half an hour at most to meet with
hurriedly recruited lawyers, many of whom had
no background or training in immigration
law. ICE set a 7-day “fast track”
deadline for the workers to decide whether to
accept a short jail term, then deportation, or
to contest their citation, face a longer term,
longer detention and
deportation.
One witness told the House Judiciary
Immigration subcommittee the workers’ lack of
knowledge of English and limited education
means people “with a third-grade education”
had to cope with these life-or-death decisions,
with virtually no help. An immigration
lawyer testified half an hour “is barely
enough time to learn their
names.”
But what was even worse was the climate of fear
instilled in the town, said the Rev. Paul
Ouderkirk, pastor of St. Bridget’s Roman
Catholic Church, which ministers to many of the
workers--and which has to handle the shattered
families.
“I wasn’t prepared for the scope of this
raid,” though ICE had raided elsewhere in the
area twice before, the pastor said.
“The church was full of people, the rectory
was full of people” and because of fear, they
won’t come out. “We’re bedding down
800 people a day, and feeding them every
meal” because they’re afraid to go
home.
Literally, he said, kids would refuse to go to
school because they feared they’d be picked
up on the street by ICE agents, as their
parents were. The kids are all U.S.
citizens. The parents were a combination
of undocumented workers, documented workers,
and green card holders from Guatemala, Mexico,
elsewhere in Latin America and--ironically for
a kosher meat plant--two
Israelis.
“What had been done over 15 years on
diversity” to build up relations in the
community between its white majority, the
immigrant workers and the plant’s Orthodox
Jewish owners from Brooklyn, N.Y., “was
destroyed in one day,” Ouderkirk
said.
But the problem isn’t just one plant in
Postville, or one ICE raid, speakers
said. United Food and Commercial Workers
President Joe Hansen, whose union was trying to
organize Postville when the raid occurred,
cited other ICE raids
nationwide.
After ICE raids on seven Swift & Co.,
packing plants nationwide rounded up thousands
of workers--only 62 of whom turned out to be
suspects--UFCW opened a campaign against the
agency, based on defending workers’
constitutional rights. UFCW represented
the workers in six of those plants. The
raids so crippled the historic Chicago
meatpacker that it had to be sold to a
Brazilian meatpacking
firm.
“Agriprocessors is the poster child for how
companies game our immigration system and how
they exploit workers and drive down wages and
working conditions in our industries,” he
said.
“We know Agriprocessors employed children as
young as 13…Government documents have also
exposed allegations of violence against
workers. They describe a supervisor
duct-taping a worker’s eyes and beating him
with a meat hook. The worker says he was
too afraid to come forward and report the
incident. He was afraid he would be fired,”
Hansen
said.
The firm’s record of child labor violations,
work and safety violations, wage and hour
violations and other violations is so long it
has drawn hundreds of thousands of dollars in
fines. Its workers’’ rights record is
so band that in May one of the three Jewish
authorities that certify kosher meat yanked its
recognition from Agriprocessors.
And Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.) said that it
is easier for ICE “to round up people who
look like me” than fairly enforce immigration
laws. “They have 750 lawyers and
thousands of agents, but they’re not going
after drug traffickers” along the U.S.-Mexico
border. They’re pursuing workers, using an
enforcement bent, he
said.
The solution, all the speakers said, was a
rewrite of U.S. immigration law that would both
set priorities for border enforcement and also
provide a path of legalization for the
estimated 12 million undocumented workers now
in the U.S. Deporting them, as ICE forced
on the Postville workers, is not a solution,
Hansen
said.
“If you take 10 million-15 million workers
out of the country, you wouldn’t have any
meat to eat, you wouldn’t have any chicken to
eat, many of your hotel rooms wouldn’t be
clean and half of all fast-food places would
close,” he said. “There’s no reason
for ICE to violate anyone’s constitutional
rights.” ###
