Sarah Stillman, When Deportation Is a Death Sentence. The New Yorker, Monday, 15 January 2018. “Hundreds of thousands of immigrants in the U.S. may face violence and murder in their home countries. What happens when they are forced to return? In the past decade, a growing number of immigrants fearing for their safety have come to the U.S., only to be sent back to their home countries—with the help of border agents, immigration judges, politicians, and U.S. voters—to violent deaths. Even as border apprehensions have dropped, the number of migrants coming to the U.S. because their lives are in danger has soared. According to the United Nations, since 2008 there has been a fivefold increase in asylum seekers just from Central America’s Northern Triangle—Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador—where organized gangs are dominant. In 2014, according to the U.N., Honduras had the world’s highest murder rate; El Salvador and Guatemala were close behind…. [Read more…]
January 15, 2018
When Deportation Is a Death Sentence
January 15, 2018 Filed Under: Immigration Tagged With: 1951 convention relating to the status of refugees, 1980 refugee act, asylum seekers, department of homeland security, edward j. markey, el salvador, global migration project (columbia university's graduate school of journalism), government accountability office, guatemala, honduras, immigration and customs enforcement (ice), inter-american commission on human rights, jennifer harbury, president franklin roosevelt, transactional records access clearinghouse, u.s. customs and border protection (cpb), undocumented immigrants, victims of immigration crime engagement