• ’This is literally an industry’: drone images give rare look at for-profit #Ice detention centers

    Art project combines interviews with ex-detainees on their trauma during Covid-19, and imagery of the growth of private-run detention in the US

    “Imagine how it feels there, locked up, the whole day without catching the air, without … seeing the light, because that is a cave there, in there you go crazy; without being able to see my family, just being able to listen to them on a phone and be able to say, ‘OK, bye,’ because the calls are expensive.”

    That’s how Alejandro, an asylum seeker from Cuba, described his time in an #Immigration_and_Customs_Enforcement (Ice) detention center.

    His account is one of dozens captured in a collection of audio recordings as part of a project aiming to show how the US immigration detention system, the world’s largest, has commodified people as part of a for-profit industry.

    “We’ve commodified human displacement,” said artist David Taylor, who has used drones to take aerial photography and video of 28 privately run Ice detention centers near the US southern border, in California, #Arizona and #Texas.

    While accounts of abuse and exploitation from inside facilities appear in the news media, the detention centers are usually in isolated, underpopulated areas with access to photographers or film crews tightly controlled.

    This new image collection, taken from near the perimeters of the facilities, gives a rare look at just how many of these centers occupy the landscape. “What I want to show through the accumulation of imagery is that this is literally an industry,” Taylor said, “that it’s expansive, that it occupies a significant amount of territory in our national landscape – and I’m only showing a fraction of it.

    “That, to me, is an important realization. The scale is shocking; how it is changing the United States,” said Taylor, a professor of art at the University of Arizona.

    The imagery will ultimately be shown in an exhibition incorporating the stories of some of the people captured inside this system. These audio recordings come from a collaboration with Taylor and a group which provides free legal service to detained migrants in Arizona, the Florence Project, and writer Francisco Cantú.

    When the project is eventually presented in a gallery, it will also include data on the costs, profits and revenue of corporations involved. Late in the the Obama era, the Department of Justice (DoJ) discontinued all use of private prison corporations to house detainees, but the DoJ during the Trump administration reversed this policy.

    Between 2015 and 2018, as the administration began to ramp up its crackdown on immigrants, the targeted average daily population of detained immigrants grew 50%. Corporations won contracts from Ice worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Taylor said the project was fraught because he was taking artistic photos and video of sites where traumas have occurred, but hopes the final work will help people understand how those inside are being used to support an industry. The detainees’ vulnerability during the Covid-19 pandemic added to an urgency to spotlight the facilities, he said.

    Excerpts from some of the interviews follow. Each of the interviewees was given a pseudonym because their asylum cases are pending. Alejandro and Alonzo’s interviews were translated from Spanish.

    All three were held at facilities operated by CoreCivic, which disputes allegations about conditions and said it was committed to health and safety.
    ‘They are not interested in our lives’

    Alonzo – La Palma correctional center in Eloy, Arizona

    When Covid first struck the detention center, Alonzo said he helped organize strikes to protest the conditions inside which were exposing everyone, including the guards, to the illness.

    The 34-year-old said he was refused access to a Covid test even though he was feeling unwell. A month later, he said he was taken to the hospital because he was having such trouble breathing and his skin was turning black. “The truth is that you need to be dying there so that they can take care of you, what they do with you there is lousy, lousy, lousy. They are not interested in our lives in the least.”

    In a hospital emergency room, a doctor told Alonzo he had blood clots and probably had cancer because they found tumors in his lungs and kidneys.

    “When they give me this news, they tell me that they have to return me to La Palma correctional center and put me in a cell. I spent a day and a half locked up without being able to get out at all. On that day they gave me half an hour to bathe, let my family know what was happening to me, and locked me up again.

    “During this time that I was there, there were many people. We stood up to be treated, there were colleagues who collapsed inside the tank, people who convulsed. We prayed because the nurses who treated us, the nurses came and told us, ‘You have nothing, it’s a simple flu,’ and nothing happens.”

    Alonzo described witnessing many suicide attempts. He said he found strength in his wish to see his daughters again and his belief in God. “I always had something in my mind and in my heart, that God did not save me from Mexico to come to die in a forgotten cell. I knew within myself that I was not going to die there.”

    He said the strikes came about as conditions worsened. “One day we all got organized and got together to talk. ‘You know what, brother? There is no Cuban here, there is no Mexican here, there is no Indian here, there is no Venezuelan here, there is no Nicaraguan here, there is nothing. Here we are all here. Because we are all infected, because we are all dying. This is fighting for our existence, it is no longer fighting for a residence, it is no longer fighting for a parole, it is no longer fighting for bail, it is all fighting to get out of here alive.’”
    ‘They told me I had Covid-19. They never gave me treatment’

    Alejandro – Central Arizona Florence correctional center

    Alejandro approached a border checkpoint to seek asylum after three months of waiting in Mexico, seeking refuge from political persecution in his native Cuba. At the border, his pregnant wife was allowed to stay with a relative in the US, while Alejandro, 19, was detained.

    During his three months in detention, he was told he tested positive for Covid-19, which he was skeptical of because he didn’t have symptoms and was asthmatic. He said he was put in solitary confinement because of the test result, then transferred to a civil jail, where he said conditions were worse.

    The most painful part of all, however, was missing the birth of his son after his wife underwent a difficult pregnancy.
    Joe Biden reverses anti-immigrant Trump policies hours after swearing-in
    Read more

    “Imagine, it broke my heart, I could hardly speak. Every time I spoke to my wife, or listened to the child, a lump would form in my throat that I could not swallow. It was a thing that does not let you swallow, that makes your chest constrict from so much suffering, from so much pain … If you are a parent, you know what I am telling you … The words did not come out from so much suffering … I spoke a few words and cried. She could hardly speak. Sometimes it was better not to call, because if I called I would feel worse than not calling.”

    Alejandro said he cried every day in detention and was treated by a psychologist in a five-minute “speed date” appointment. “She asked me, ‘Hi, I understand you have a boy, how are you feeling?’ I told her I felt bad, how else was I going to feel? She said, ‘you need to read, to relax,’ just that. Nonsense, something quick. They told me I had Covid-19 and they never gave me any treatment, just water. They told me, ‘Drink water, lots of water.’”
    Responses from #CoreCivic and Ice

    A CoreCivic company spokesman, Ryan Gustin, denied the allegations Alejandro and Alonzo made about conditions in their facilities. “We have responded to this unprecedented situation appropriately, thoroughly and with care for the safety and wellbeing of those entrusted to us and our communities,” Gustin said. “We don’t cut corners on care, staff or training, which meets, and in many cases exceeds, our government partners’ standards.”

    CoreCivic said all detainees were supplied with face masks and denied any allegations that detainees were refused Covid tests. “Initially, detainees were asked to sign an acknowledgment form related to the use of the masks.” The spokesman said detainees were not placed in solitary confinement because of a positive test; he said there were “cohorting procedures … which are intended to prevent the spread of infection” which involve no loss of privileges or activities. CoreCivic denied claims of multiple suicide attempts saying “any such incident would be reported to our government partner”.

    Ice, which oversees the facilities, said the agency was “firmly dedicated to the health and safety of all individuals in our custody”.

    “Since the outbreak of Covid-19, Ice has taken extensive steps to safeguard all detainees, staff and contractors, including: reducing the number of detainees in custody by placing individuals on alternatives to detention programs, suspending social visitation, incorporating social distancing practices with staggered meals and recreation times, and through the use of testing, cohorting and medical isolation.”
    ‘Let me go back home and face my death’

    Mary – in Central Arizona Florence correctional complex one night, then Eloy detention center

    Mary was first detained in Mexico, where she arrived after traveling from her home in Uganda. She was eventually released, sought asylum in the US at a border checkpoint and was detained for five and a half months.

    Detention conditions were similar in the two countries, she said, except Mexican guards occasionally held days where people could socialize with family or friends who were also detained.

    The isolation Mary experienced in the US was intense. She didn’t speak to her young children in Africa the whole time because she couldn’t afford the costs of the calls and relied on a volunteer to relay messages between the mother and her children.

    Also, because she doesn’t speak Spanish, it was more difficult for her to make relationships with immigrants inside from mostly Spanish-speaking countries, and the schedules in the prison made it difficult to develop relationships with others.

    “The Cameroonians were there, but again, everybody used to feel sad, everybody used not to talk. It was like that, since you were sad all the time, you could not communicate, you could not joke.”

    She, like many others, described how many people just wanted to be deported instead of waiting out their time in detention.

    “One day I thought that if the judge denies me, I’ll just tell her or him, ‘Let me go back home and face my death, because I never wanted to stay in detention more. I was thinking about that, but I could not again decide since I was afraid of getting back home.

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/29/ice-immigration-detention-centers-drone-photography-rare-look-arizona
    #privatisation #complexe-militaro-industriel #business #asile #migrations #réfugiés #centres #centres_de_détention #détention_administrative #rétention #industrie #photographie #USA #Etats-Unis #enfermement #Californie

    ping @isskein

  • BDS c’est résister au fascisme qui monte en occident

    Global Empire : Eyal Weizman : Excavating Israel
    https://vimeo.com/167062251

    Tariq Ali talks to Eyal Weizmann, Professor of Spacial and Visual Cultures Goldsmiths, University of London, about the pressure being applied by Israel on the White House and EU to illegalise the BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) campaign.

    #BDS #Israël #Palestine #Etats-Unis #Union-Européenne #refus-du-droit-international #réfugiés #fascisme #racisme #crise-de-la-démocratie #complexe-militaro-industriel #services-de-renseignements #industrie-de-l'armement #données-privées

  • Par ses financements à la recherche israélienne ou aux projets en collaboration, l’Union Européenne finance l’armée israélienne et les crimes israéliens.

    Double usage et mésusage des résultats de la recherche dans les cas de financement des sociétés militaires et de sécurité israéliennes par l’UE
    http://www.aurdip.fr/double-usage-et-mesusage-des.html

    Cet exposé démontre que jusqu’ici, l’UE n’a fourni aucun argument satisfaisant pour justifier, dans le cadre de l’Horizon 2020, le financement de projets qui impliquent Elbit Systems et d’autres sociétés israéliennes, et demande que ces projets soient immédiatement exclus du financement.

    – Les sociétés militaires israéliennes (publiques et privées) travaillent en connexion directe avec l’armée israélienne, fournissant les équipements et armes nécessaires à ses opérations illégales dans le cadre des agressions militaires israéliennes et de la colonisation par Israël des territoires palestiniens occupés.

    Le financement de ces sociétés par l’UE alimente intrinsèquement la capacité d’Israël à poursuivre ses crimes de guerre et ses graves violations des droits de l’Homme et des lois internationales.
    Le double usage est un élément constant de la technologie israélienne. Comme le déclare Isaac Benisrael, président de l’Agence Spatiale Israélienne : « Parce que nous sommes un petit pays, si on construit une petite chaîne de production de satellites, disons chez IAI, on l’utilisera militairement et commercialement. »

    – Les projets actuels et anciens financés par l’UE :

    ont favorisé le développement de la technologie israélienne des drones
    ont aidé à prolonger le développement des technologies qui servent à construire et à entretenir le Mur illégal, à renforcer le blocus de Gaza pendant les agressions militaires israéliennes qui comportaient des crimes de guerre et peut-être des crimes contre l’humanité.
    Ceci est en contradiction avec la politique européenne et exige qu’Israël mette fin à son projet de colonisation illégale, lève le siège de Gaza et les inquiétudes à propos d’agressions militaires israéliennes.
    L’UE n’a pas les moyens d’arrêter le mésusage de leur technologie par les sociétés israéliennes et le savoir-faire développé grâce au financement R&D (recherche et développement).

    Horizon 2020 donne son aval à la violence coloniale israélienne et à la complicité de l’Union européenne
    http://www.agencemediapalestine.fr/blog/2016/05/11/horizon-2020-donne-son-aval-a-la-violence-coloniale-israelienne

    L’ECCP insiste sur le fait que ce double usage est même reconnu par Israël : « L’UE n’a pas les moyens d’empêcher les entreprises israéliennes de faire un usage impropre de la technologie et de leur savoir-faire développés grâce au financement de la Recherche et Développement ». Pourtant, l’UE a l’obligation, de par le droit international, de refuser d’aider et maintenir la violation de la législation internationale par Israël.

    Cette contradiction a permis de séparer totalement droit international et obligations internationales, dans la mesure où l’impunité est devenue un élément convoité et intégré dans toute décision, et dans les explications puériles ultérieures. Un exemple d’une telle attitude en est la réponse de Christian Berger, directeur du Service européen pour l’action extérieure (EEAS), département pour l’Afrique du Nord, le Moyen-Orient, la Péninsule arabique, l’Iran et l’Iraq : « Il n’existe aucune base juridique pour exclure des entités-partenaires de projets qui conduisent des activités militaires hors du champ des actions d’Horizon 2020 ».

    Pour Dirk Becker, directeur exécutif de l’Agence Innovation et Réseaux : « L’allégation, selon laquelle la recherche scientifique effectuée a été ou sera utilisée à des fins militaires et dans le but de déployer des produits militaires, n’est pas justifiée ». Ceci est basé sur la supposition qu’Horizon 2020 fournit des fonds à la recherche scientifique. Pourtant, rien ne permet de nier le fait que l’UE se rend complice en apportant un soutien financier à une recherche qui sera au bout du compte utilisée par Israël dans son oppression des Palestiniens, en dépit des comités d’éthique qui, à les en croire, surveillent les doubles usages, les abus et les violations du droit international.

    L’information que fournit la note de l’ECCP n’est qu’une mince partie d’une violence politique normalisée qui a progressé sans pratiquement aucune entrave.

    #Israël #Union-Européenne #financement-de-la-recherche #complexe-militaro-industriel #crimes #crimes-de-guerre #refus-du-droit #mensonge-politique #finacement-de-crimes