Posts Tagged ‘No More Deaths’

National Days of Action to End “Operation Streamline”

No Comments | Share On Facebook| National Days of Action to End “Operation Streamline” Share/Save/Bookmark Feb 19, 2013

No More Deaths, the humanitarian aid ministry of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Tucson which goes out into the desert to save the lives of immigrants crossing the vast Arizona/Mexico border, is urging their supporters to act now to end” Operation Streamline” and other punitive border enforcement practices. No More Deaths is working with a coalition of local and national partners this week to urge members of Congress to end Operation Streamline and focus on real immigration reform.

Operation Streamline involves a series of Kafka-esque federal court proceedings held daily throughout the southern border states and criminalizes 70 immigrants per day in Tucson alone. A second border crossing results in a felony charge that can lead to up to twenty years in a federal prison. Often, these individuals are simply trying to provide for their families. You can watch a first person account of what the Operation Streamline system is like here.

As the Obama administration sets new records on deportations, an increasing number of individuals who are trying to rejoin family members settled in the United States have become wrapped up in Operation Streamline and other punitive border enforcement measures.

Streamline is also a key component of the administration’s policy of mass incarceration for tens of thousands of undocumented immigrants from all over the country, and part of a series of lucrative contracts with the private, for-profit prison industry. These corporations prey on undocumented immigrants by initiating anti-immigrant legislation in Arizona, Alabama, and many other states–guaranteeing that all their cells remain filled, while costing taxpayers billions of dollars for the unnecessary, long-term incarceration of nonviolent immigrants whose only “crime” is trying to feed their families.

You can help end Operation Streamline by taking action today! Use this form to write your members of Congress or these talking points to give their offices a call.


This post was written by Leila Pine, a No More Deaths volunteer and member of the UU Church of Tucson.

Justice for Nogales Teen Killed by Border Patrol

2 Comments | Share On Facebook| Justice for Nogales Teen Killed by Border Patrol Share/Save/Bookmark Nov 19, 2012

Memorial for José Antonio at a Day of the Dead Border Vigil in Nogales. (Credit: David Icely)

On the night of October 10, around 11:30 pm, José Antonio Elena Rodriguez, a 16-year-old resident of Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, was shot dead by a U.S. Border Patrol agent on Mexican soil. This tragedy hit home for me because José Antonio was killed on a street I know well in the border community where I live. But this incident is not unique. There have been 18 violent killings by Border Patrol or Customs and Border Protection agents since 2010—including a similar one in Nogales in January 2011. To my shame, I failed to raise my voice then.

The known circumstances of these killings strongly suggest unnecessary or excessive use of force. Please join me in denouncing them and calling for action.

The agent that killed José Antonio fired on him from atop a 25-foot embankment and from behind a 20-foot-tall protective steel border wall. José Antonio was shot in the back 13 times, with two bullets found in his head. He was unarmed. He died only a couple blocks from his house. These facts leave me with no doubt that this was an unlawful killing.

Six weeks have passed. The FBI, tasked with investigating the incident, has released no official statements, and has neither identified nor arrested the agent involved. The identities of officers involved in shootings are public information, and many in this border community, where I and other No More Deaths volunteers live and work, see José Antonio’s death as a clear case of bloody murder.

Please join me in urging the Department of Justice and the FBI to act transparently and decisively to end this unnecessary violence.

The excessive use of force that resulted in the deaths of José Antonio and 17 others is not the action of isolated “bad apples.” Rather, it is a consequence of the Border Patrol’s militarized approach to border enforcement, and it shows a callousness that is consistent with the findings of No More Deaths’ 2011 report Culture of Cruelty, which documented 32,075 incidents of mistreatment of migrants in Border Patrol custody.

We seek justice for José Antonio’s family and an end to these killings. Please take action and make your voice heard.

For justice and for peace,

David Hill
No More Deaths volunteer


The message above went out on Monday, November 19, 2012 to Standing on the Side of Love supporters. You can sign-up for these emails here.

Need to Know

No Comments | Share On Facebook| Need to Know Share/Save/Bookmark Jul 16, 2012

The message below went out on Monday, July 16, 2012 to Standing on the Side of Love supporters. You can sign-up for these emails here.


A fews days ago, we learned that a federal grand jury is considering criminal charges against the U.S. Border Patrol agents who beat and murdered Anastasio Hernandez Rojas. Eyewitness videos of the killing, along with testimony from Anastasio’s family, were featured on PBS’ Need to Know program in April. People across the country were able to see and hear for themselves the Border Patrol’s culture of impunity and abuse. It was the public outcry from this incident that finally compelled the Department of Justice to open an investigation into Anastasio’s killing.

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Click here to watch the episode's trailer.

On July 20, 2012, PBS’ Need to Know will air a second program highlighting Border Patrol abuse in detention centers and in the field. Please watch this program with your friends and family.

Following the broadcast of this episode, No More Deaths volunteers and others featured in the program will travel to Washington, D.C. with the Southern Border Community Coalition to urge the Obama Administration to implement much-needed policy reforms, including mechanisms for public oversight and accountability. No More Deaths has worked to documents these abuse for the last six years.

We are in the midst of a significant moment when long-standing practices of impunity and abuse are being made visible. Together, we can build greater accountability and oversight of Border Patrol and U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

We need your help to elevate the cry for justice for the more than 6 million residents of the United States who live along the U.S./Mexico border:
- Encourage your congregation to watch the program.
- Forward this email to your friends, coworkers, and neighbors.
- Host a ‘watching party’ of the PBS Need to Know episode at 8 pm EST on Friday, July 20.

Check your local listings for details.

These stories only have impact to the extent that people know what is happening. Can you help us take this next step in advancing justice? Start by sharing this announcement and stay tuned for additional steps you can take to bring justice home.

Cheers,

Sarah

Sarah Launius
Volunteer, No More Deaths

danielle alvarado

Danielle Alvarado
Volunteer, No More Deaths

Tell Napolitano: Stop Abuse by the U.S. Border Patrol

No Comments | Share On Facebook| Tell Napolitano: Stop Abuse by the U.S. Border Patrol Share/Save/Bookmark Jun 22, 2012

The message below went out on Friday, June 22, 2012 to Standing on the Side of Love supporters. You can sign-up for these emails here.


“I think there is the sense that it’s the border and that they’re ‘illegal.’ There’s this view that they aren’t supposed to be there, and they put themselves in the situation. Whatever happens to them they deserve. It’s hard to get sympathy or garner outrage over some of these cases.”

-Michelle Brané, Dir. of the Detention & Asylum program at the Women’s Refugee Commission, discussing the lack of mainstream media attention paid to U.S. Border Patrol abuse of migrants.

end_bp_abuseIn her “Prayer for Justice General Assembly,” Rev. Lilia Cuervo wrote, “Spirit of Justice, help us even in the middle of our busy lives to be clear that our work is not finished until those responsible for advancing and protecting migrants rights, effectively and conscientiously do so.”

This morning at our Justice General Assembly, in a workshop entitled “Culture of Cruelty: Documenting Human Rights Abuses Against Immigrants,” Standing on the Side of Love will join No More Deaths and Amnesty International to do just that—shine the light on Border Patrol abuse of migrants and discuss how the country’s largest law enforcement agency can be held more accountable.

Even if you aren’t in Phoenix this week, you can still speak out against this culture of cruelty. Click here to use our “Love in Action” Facebook app to send a message to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Napolitano.

Human rights organizations working at the border have found consistent patterns of Border Patrol abuse during detention and deportation. For example, the humanitarian organization No More Deaths documented 30,000 incidents of abuse from November 2008-March 2011. Since 2010, nine people have been reported killed or seriously injured in Border Patrol custody. While the Department of Homeland Security, under which Border Patrol falls, has internal oversight mechanisms, they are not preventing the kinds of abuse taking place. Independent observers are needed to monitor Border Patrol detention conditions.

Click here to take action and tell Secretary Napolitano that these human rights abuses must end.

It is imperative to give human rights advocates access to Border Patrol facilities. Only through outside monitoring—and independent oversight of Border Patrol from outside DHS—will the Border Patrol’s culture of cruelty truly change.

In faith,

meredith ga

Meredith Lukow
Program Assistant

Dan-Furmansky-cropped

Dan Furmansky
Campaign Manager
Standing on the Side of Love

No More Deaths Wins Wilton Peace Prize

No Comments | Share On Facebook| No More Deaths Wins Wilton Peace Prize Share/Save/Bookmark May 15, 2012

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No More Deaths/No Mas Muertes, an all-volunteer-led organization that embodies the very spirit of being the change one wishes to see in the world, has been chosen as this year’s recipient of the Wilton Peace Prize. The Wilton Peace Prize is given annually by the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) to individuals or groups in recognition of their contribution to “peace and human progress.” The award was established by Henry and Irene Wilton in 1984 and previous recipients include the Vietnam Veterans of America, Rep. Cynthia McKinney, and the World Council on Religion and Peace.

No More Deaths is a human rights and humanitarian aid organization that was first organized in 2004 with a simple mission to reduce deaths and suffering among migrants crossing the border through the Sonoran Desert. Since then it has expanded its work to meet the changing needs of undocumented immigrants and their families and to increase national awareness and draw attention to the enormous humanitarian crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border, where more than 6,000 innocent men, women and children have already died. No More Deaths is the social justice ministry of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Tucson and runs a number of programs including the Desert Aid Working Group, the Summer Desert Camps program as well as an Alternate Spring Break Camp in Arivaca, and the Abuse Documentation Working Group, which has been documenting human rights abuses by U.S. Border Patrol agents against migrants in their custody for the past six years.

According to a nomination letter written by Rev. Diane Dowgiert of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Tucson:

No More Deaths has contributed significantly to peace and human progress over the past eight years. Not only has this volunteer-driven humanitarian aid organization saved thousands of lives in the Sonoran Desert, giving water, food and medical care to displaced migrant workers forced to cross the most treacherous parts of the U.S.-Mexico border in search of jobs to provide for their families. No More Deaths has also spent the past six years documenting human rights abuses by the U.S. Border Patrol against thousands of migrants in their custody, both in the desert and in short-term immigrant detention centers.

culture_crueltyNo More Deaths has led the way in abuse documentation with its first report, “Crossing the Line,” in 2008, and has produced an outstanding second report, “A Culture of Cruelty,” providing high quality documentation of almost 30,000 instances of abuse from interviews with almost 13,000 migrants over a three-year period. They have set a national standard for the documentation of human rights abuses against migrants for subsequent reports by Amnesty International USA, the ACLU and other national human rights organizations across the country, who have sought out No More Deaths when beginning their research at the border.

In addition, through its “Keep Tucson Together” project, No More Deaths has been more successful than any other organization to date in helping local undocumented immigrant families stay together, by fighting to close the cases of inappropriate deportation orders sent to immigrant parents without any criminal record, whose children and spouses living with them in the U.S. are dependent upon them financially and emotionally.

Since the release of “A Culture of Cruelty” on September 21, 2011, the report has also received coverage from CNN, USA Today, Reuters News Service, Democracy Now and many other news outlets. No More Deaths will receive a $1,500 donation from the UUA to support its efforts.

Thank you, No More Deaths, for your incredible work for human rights, and a better world for all people.

I would like to nominate No More Deaths/No Mas Muertes, the social justice ministry of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Tucson, for the Wilton Peace Prize this year.  This amazing, volunteer-run human rights and humanitarian aid organization was first organized in 2004 with a simple mission to reduce deaths and suffering among migrants crossing the border through the Sonoran Desert.  Since then it has expanded its work to meet the changing needs of undocumented immigrants and their families and to increase national awareness and draw attention to the enormous humanitarian crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border, where more than 6,000 innocent men, women and children have already died.
During the past eight years, No More Deaths has expanded its scope to include:
the Desert Aid Working Group, which provides water, food, clothing and a medical tent to treat injuries and dehydration-related illnesses of migrants crossing the border.  This year there have been several volunteers working with migrants in the desert throughout the winter months as well.
the Summer Desert Camps program as well as an Alternate Spring Break Camp in Arivaca, where hundreds of young adult volunteers come each year to be trained about border history, politics, legal issues and first aid so that they can reach out to save more lives in the desert through hands-on, experiential learning.
an Abuse Documentation Working Group, which has been documenting human rights abuses by U.S. Border Patrol agents against migrants in their custody for the past six years.  Its first report, “Crossing the Line”, was published in 2008, and made the human rights community aware of the horrific human rights abuses, and even torture, committed by Border Patrol agents.  Following that report, the ACLU of Arizona and other human rights organizations began to consult with No More Deaths and issue their own reports on human rights abuses at the border.
In September, 2011, No More Deaths issued a far more extensive report, “A Culture of Cruelty:  Abuse and Impunity in Short-Term U.S. Border Patrol Custody.”  This report was based on statistical compilations of interviews with more than 12,000 migrants over a three-year period in Nogales, Naco and Agua Prieta, Sonora, Mexico, finding and categorizing about 30,000 specific instances of human rights abuses.  This report, which strongly demonstrates that these human rights abuses by Border Patrol are systemic and must be dealt with systemically, includes numerous recommendations, including the need to demand access to immigrant detention facilities s by human rights organizations to investigate conditions and treatment of migrants held there, and the need for an independent oversight agency comprised of citizens and human rights organizations to investigate abuses, with the power to enforce human rights standards and discipline agents who violate those standards.
The “Culture of Cruelty” report (online at www.nomoredeaths.org/cultureofcruelty.html), with the help of the UUA’s Standing on the Side of Love and the UU United Nations Organization, has opened many new doors for No More Deaths.  They were honored with a rare invitation to testify about the report at hearings on March 27, 2012, before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights of the Organization of American States in Washington, D.C.  They also gave presentations before the U.N. NGO Commission on Human Rights, the U.N. High Commissioner on Human Rights, and a Congressional briefing in Washington, D.C., as well as at a meeting with a White House policy advisor.  And they will give a workshop presentation on “A Culture of Cruelty” on June 22, 2012, at the UUA Justice General Assembly in Phoenix, along with Amnesty International USA and Standing on the Side of Love.
the Nogales/Mexico Project Working Group, based in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.  There No More Deaths volunteers has worked since 2006 to provide humanitarian aid to individuals deported from the U.S. to cities along the border.  NMD works in partnership with multiple humanitarian, faith-based and governmental organizations in Northern Sonora and has partnerships in two border communities, Nogales and Agua Prieta. In 2011 almost 55,000 people were deported though Nogales from all over the U.S.  No More Deaths volunteers currently support between 60-120 people a day making phone calls to their families back home, successfully retrieving missing personal belongings confiscated by law enforcement to around 30 people per month, and helping about 50 people a month reconnect with family members separated in deportation. They also provide first aid and medical care at the Mexican Grupos Beta offices, in partnership with the Jesuit-based Kino Border Initiative.
the “We Reject Racism” campaign against Arizona SB 1070, partnering with the immigrant rights group Tierra y Libertad Organizacion.  ”We Reject Racism” was a campaign to sign on small businesses in Tucson to publicly oppose SB 1070 and to educate the community with information, store signs and yard signs.
the “Keep Tucson Together” campaign, to fight separation of immigrant families through deportation.  NMD’s “Keep Tucson Together” volunteers are fighting the deportation orders that were sent to 50 Tucson undocumented immigrants who have no criminal record, and whose spouses and children are either U.S. citizens or have legal residency or visas, and depend upon them for financial and emotional support.  No More Deaths has already succeeded in getting many of these deportation cases administratively closed through a campaign of public activism, media team work and social witness, in conjunction with the legal services of No More Deaths Atty. Margo Cowan.
Below please find media coverage of No More Deaths activities.  As the Media Coverage of No More Deaths shows, No More Deaths has set the standards for high quality research and documentation of human rights abuses by the U.S. Border Patrol against migrants in their custody.  Since that time the ACLU of Arizona, Amnesty International USA, PBS “Frontline” documentary “Lost in Detention” and the media have supported our findings.  Interview requests from the media have greatly increased, with the latest request coming from the BBC to interview NMD volunteers who work on the Mexico side of Nogales with just-deported migrants.