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US: children left abandoned by factory immigration raid
By John Levine
5 August 2005
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On Tuesday, July 26, between 30 and 35 children, some as young
as three months old, were left stranded when federal agents arrested
119 immigrant workers at the Petit Jean Poultry plant in Arkadelphia,
Arkansas. No provisions were made for these children as their
parents were carted 70 miles away to a detention center to await
deportation.
Many of these families, now forcibly torn apart, had lived
and worked at the company for years. Of those detained, 115 were
from Mexico, two were from Honduras and the other two were from
El Salvador and Guatemala.
This surprise raid caught the towns mayor, the Clark
County sheriff, and the plant manager by surprise, and no provisions
were made to care for the children or to alert relatives. The
federal agents failed to even contact the Department of Human
Services, the agency that is usually responsible for abandoned
children.
A lot of those families had kids in day care in different
places, and they didnt know why Mommy and Daddy didnt
come pick them up, Arkadelphia Mayor Charles Hollingshead
told the Associated Press.
An Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman claimed Friday
that every one of the immigrants had lied to the agents, telling
them they had no children. He later changed his story, admitting
that the detainees did tell the agents that they had children
left behind. Still, the agents did not allow the detainees to
contact their families to make arrangements for their children.
Jose Luis Vidal told the Associated Press that his sister and
brother-in-law left behind children aged ten, five and one when
they were deported to Laredo, Mexico.
The children are very sad, especially the baby. She cries
all the time, Vidal said. His sister is attempting to obtain
a work permit to return to the United States. Vidal said his sister
had been be able to make a furtive call before she was taken away,
while many of the others were not as fortunate.
Faced with the choice of either waiting in jail indefinitely
for a hearing or being deported, many of the workers have agreed
to immediate deportation. The burden of caring for the children
has fallen on to the local community, mostly relatives, while
some are still being looked after by a local church. In addition,
many spouses were left alone after their husbands or wives were
deported.
Ronnie Farnam, the plant manager, told the local Sifting
Herald News that the immigration agents were abusive in their
treatment of the workers. I know they were arrested for
working here illegally, but theyre still human beings,
he said. (The agents) say they were arresting folks for
identity theft, yet none of them has been charged with identity
theft. It was an immigration raid, pure and simple.
The raid will also have a wider effect on the community as
a whole. According to Farnam, some 60 workers have not shown up
for the night shift since the raid occurred, likely fearing they
will also be detained. Finding and training replacements for these
workers will take months, during which time the plant will run
at 40 to 60 percent of normal production. This means that millions
of dollars that would have been paid in wages and taxes to the
community will now be lost, causing a wider depression in an already
poor area.
Despite the extremely harsh and punitive measures that they
face at the hands of US authorities, the number of undocumented
immigrants residing and working in the United States continues
to grow.
The Pew Hispanic Center issued a report on June 14 detailing
the demographics of undocumented immigrants. The report estimated
that as of March 2004 there were 10.3 million members in the unauthorized
population, a majority of them living with families. At
that time, an estimated 13.9 million people, including 4.2 million
children, lived in households in which the head of the household
or the spouse is an unauthorized migrant. Out of this
population, 3.2 million individuals, mostly children, are citizenshaving
been born in the USwhile other members of the family, usually
their parents, face the threat of deportation.
Since the mid-1990s, unauthorized migrants entering
the United States outnumbered the legal immigrants. In recent
years, 700,000 unauthorized migrants entered annually,
compared to 610,000 legal immigrants. A majority of the new unauthorized
population have high school degrees and nearly 20 percent
have some level of college education. Nearly one-third of these
undocumented workers own their own homes in the US.
Even though a 1986 law prohibits employers from hiring workers
lacking proof of proper immigration status, 6.3 million unauthorized
workers were employed as of March 2004, comprising 4.3 percent
of the civilian labor force. Families of these workers had an
average annual income of between $25,700 and $29,900, depending
on how long they have lived in the country, far below the average
family income of legal immigrants ($47,800) and the native-born
($47,700).
They work in all sectors of the economy. A summary of the report
stated, While 3 percent of unauthorized workers are employed
in agriculture, 33 percent have jobs in service industries and
substantial shares can be found in construction and extractive
occupations (16%) and in production, installation and repair (17%).
The report also estimated that about a quarter of all
drywall and ceiling tile installers in the United States are unauthorized
migrants, as are about a quarter of all meat and poultry workers
and a quarter of all dishwashers.
What emerges from this statistical study is a portrait of a
vindictive immigration policy whose central purpose is to maintain
a layer of repressed and under-paid labor to produce profits for
corporate America. The practice of suddenly rounding up such workers
at their workplaces and forcing them back to their home countries
serves only to instill fear among this exploited population, while
feeding right-wing anti-immigrant sentiments cultivated by both
the big business parties.
Washingtons reactionary anti-immigrant policy has claimed
thousands of lives on the US-Mexico border, while separating families
and leaving children abandoned as in the Arkansas incident. Both
the administration and Congress are considering new measures that
will only intensify these attacks.
Two competing bills before the Senate would inaugurate a new
guest worker program that would essentially institutionalize
the exploitation of immigrant labor.
Another bill before Congress, the Border Protection Patrol
Act, would authorize governors of border states to deputize groups
of vigilantes to pursue undocumented immigrants seeking to cross
into the US. The bill would permit so-called Border Protection
Corps to use any means and any force authorized by State
law to prevent individuals from unlawfully entering the United
States.
The connection between the anti-immigrant sentiments of the
right wing and its hostility to the working class as a whole was
made clear in a recent study by the Center for Immigrant Studies,
a Republican-connected think tank, noting the record number of
births to immigrants in the US.
The report warns that higher expectations of children
born to immigrants in the US pose a danger of social upheaval.
It blames the labor unrest of the great depression
on the children of European immigrants, while asserting
that it was the children of black migrants from the South
who rioted in northern cities during the 1960s.
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