By Michigan Radio
Tracy Samilton
This week, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is expected to release many of the roughly 100 Iraqis it has detained since the summer of 2017.
Tracy Samilton
This week, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is expected to release many of the roughly 100 Iraqis it has detained since the summer of 2017.
That's after a federal judge gave the government a deadline of December 20th to let them go.
In
a scathing opinion, the judge said the government knew it would not be
able to deport the detainees, because Iraq wouldn't accept them. The
judge said government attorneys made false statements to justify keeping
the detainees locked up indefinitely.
Miriam Aukerman is with the American Civil Liberties Union. In an interview with Stateside, she characterized the government's stance:
"ICE
said, 'we can lock people up and throw away the key, it doesn't matter
how long it takes. We're going to lock you up until we break your spirit
so that you agree to go to a country where you might well die,'" she
said.
Aukerman says many of the detainees are Chaldean
Christians, and many have been living peacefully in the U.S. for
decades. Many also had committed no crimes other than staying beyond the
expiration of their visas.
She says being deported to Iraq
would have put the detainees in grave danger, whether because they were
members of a minority religion, because of their ethnicity, because they
had no friends or family in Iraq and didn't speak the language, or
simply because they would have been perceived as American.
Aukerman
says the government has notified attorneys that it will not meet the
December 20th deadline for all of the detainees, and will petition the
government to allow it to keep some of them indefinitely. An ICE
spokesman has not yet confirmed this. Aukerman says the ACLU and other
attorneys will keep fighting until every one of the Iraqis has been
released.