Category: Detention

  • Ahmad Hazahza Requests Move to Brother's Housing Unit at Haskell

    By Greg Moses

    An 18-year-old immigration prisoner at the Rolling Plains jail at Haskell, Texas has made a formal request to be housed with his 23-year-old brother.

    Ahmad Hazahza made the request shortly before 8:30 Saturday evening according to a Sergeant who was reached by telephone at the facility.

    Ahmad and his brother Hisham have been jailed at the Haskell facility, along with their father and two sisters, since they were abducted in a raid last November by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
    For the first eleven weeks of detention, Ahmad was held in “alternative housing” because of his status as a minor among adult prisoners. A friend of the Hazahza family called it “solitary confinement.” No explanation has been given as to why Ahmad was not initially sent to a jail such as T. Don Hutto, where other minors are being kept.

    Sgt. Baldwin said housing units usually contain either 8 or 24 people. Each of the three male members of the Hazahza family is being detained in different housing units, he said.

    The Haskell jail is a medium security prison managed by the Emerald Companies of Louisiana.

    The Texas Civil Rights Review contacted the Haskell facility because of a news tip that Muslim prisoners in one housing unit had been threatened with restriction of their prayer privileges. But Sgt. Baldwin said the men were at the Mosque praying, and his report was later confirmed by our source.

    Release of the Hazahza family members from Haskell has become a top priority for activists since Hazahza family mother and youngest son, Juma and Mohammad, were released last week from the T. Don Hutto prison in Taylor, Texas.

    Along with the father, Radi, and two adult sons, Ahmad and Hisham, there are two adult Hazahza family daughters at Haskell, 19-year-old Suzan and 23-year-old Mirvat.

    New York attorneys Joshua Bardavid and Ted Cox are reported to be preparing a federal habeas corpus plea for the remaining Hazahza family, much the same as they did for the recently released Ibrahims.

  • Email from Angela Kopit

    For us, Williamson County resident Angela Kopit has become the face of Vigil III. When word went out about the release of the Ibrahim family last week, she was one of the local folks who gathered at Hutto jail to signal solidarity with the family. In a Dallas Morning News report on the family’s release, Kopit was quoted: “The things that my parents were fighting for in the ’60s are being taken from us now,” said Taylor resident Angela Kopit, who came with her three sons. “This is the fear of immigrants in its ugliest form.”–gm

    Hi Greg, I didn’t actually see my quote in the Dallas Morning News, I hope it was worthwhile.

    The morning’s events were lovely [Feb. 3, during the release of the Ibrahim mother and children from T. Don Hutto prison]. The crowd was small, but it was
    quite moving to see the family back together and away from that place.

    We were cheering their release and had at least one sign showing that we were supporting their release. We didn’t get close enough to actually talk to the family, but I think it was clear we were supporters. I heard from a friend in LA that our little prison made the front page of the LA TIMES today.

    The article was not flattering to CCA or the facility in general. She’s sending me the front page. Our seed of dissent is growing.

    Angela “Immigration’s net binds children too: Hundreds of minors are being held with parents caught illegally in the U.S. The facilities and conditions are like jail.” By Nicole Gaouette and Miguel Bustillo, Times Staff Writers. February 10, 2007. Los Angeles Times.

    The story features 9-year-old Khadijah and her father “Sebastien Bessuges, 30, a Frenchman who last year married an American …. Bessuges had visited a federal immigration center last month to see what forms he needed to extend his stay in the U.S. The next day, immigration agents raided his suburban Phoenix home and detained him and Khadijah.”

    The story also says a hunger strike was waged last week at Hutto over the poor quality of food and “other conditions.”

  • Gearing up for Hutto Vigil IV: Jay Calls from the Valley

    “People are really gearing up for the vigil Monday evening,” says Jay Johnson-Castro by telephone. He has just finished a 2,000 mile border caravan from San Diego to Brownsville. And he says Rio Grande Valley media will be following his travel north to the T. Don Hutto jail for Vigil IV at 5:30 pm, Feb. 12.

    “Valley media have given wide coverage to the border caravan in English and Spanish, on the television, radio, and print,” says Johnson-Castro. “It is front page news at the Brownsville Herald.”
    Media have also been busy with the story of Hutto prison since yesterday’s press tour of the facility hosted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

    “Now that we have the media in there, we still have hundreds of innocent children and moms in prison cells. Until they are free we are going to keep putting up pressure,” promises Castro as the sound of heavy rain comes through the phone with his voice.

    “And we want to get everybody to say which side they are on. Are they in favor of imprisoning children for purposes of national security or does this shock you and offend you? What kind of America do you want our future to be?” he asks.

    “I feel in my heart that the power of the American people will put an end to this demented policy.”

    When he hears how the Suleiman family have lost their first home to a policy of deportation, he pledges to get their home back, and get them back in it where they belong with their 4-year-old American twin daughters.

    “We have gone up against the most powerful force in human history and we have won,” says Johnson-Castro regarding the release of the Ibrahim family father Friday, the Suleiman mother and son Wednesday, and the Ibrahim mother and children last Saturday.

    “We have to get what is right. And the Department of Homeland Security is going to have to back down. What they are doing with their power is criminal.”–gm

  • The Words of Mohammad, an 11-year-old Hutto Prisoner

    By Greg Moses

    CounterPunch / UrukNet / DissidentVoice / SolduyuNet (Turkish translation by Sanem Ozturk) / IndyBay / ElectronicIntifada

    During the day Friday, the words of 11-year-old Mohammad Hazahza have filled him up and weighed him down. On Friday night, he pours the words back out, as if wanting to be lifted up again.

    “Mohammad is so protective of his mother,” says Ralph Isenberg in a weary and reverent voice, recalling the day’s visits to Dallas reporters. “I watched as he got her chair and made her comfortable. And that’s what he did in jail. He protected her from forced labor. When she was ordered to clean the common area, he did that work for her. He really understands family and duty.”

    For mother Juma, jail was a very difficult time. Because of her food allergies, she has come to rely on some foods. Tomatoes for example. Family supporter Riad Hamad of the Palestine Children’s Welfare Fund says Juma asked her jailers for tomatoes, but they never gave her any. Not one tomato in a hundred days. She lost 12 pounds.

    “I was shocked at what the jail has done to her physically,” says Isenberg. “There were times when I thought she would pass out. They are both very traumatized. And all I can say is we’re cranking up real hard for the release of the rest of the Hazahza family.”

    Like two other families of Palestinian heritage who were abducted by USA immigration authorities in early November, the Hazahza family had been split up. Juma and Mohammad were jailed at T. Don Hutto prison in Taylor, Texas, while father Radi was locked up at Haskell, Texas along with his four adult children.

    The mother and son recall a hard knock at the door and then a crash as men with guns filled their apartment in a pre-dawn raid on November 2. Mohammad describes the guns as AK-47s. If that’s not the model number, he was definitely looking down barrels of semi-automatic assault rifles. The family of seven were ordered out of the house. No time to change out of bed clothes.

    For Juma, memories of America are mixed with memories of life in Palestine, where she could never stop thinking about the missiles that flew over the house. She knows what it is like to live in fearful conditions. But even in Palestine, she had never been thrown into jail.

    On their second day out of jail, memories are difficult enough that Juma and Mohammad might cry once or twice, but Juma is angry and determined. She will see the rest of her family free as soon as possible. Then they will get their things out of storage and start their lives all over again. On to the next reporter, if that’s what it must take. She wants her life back.

    Inside the jail, Mohammad was ever the bright and curious kid. He was certainly not impressed with the school lessons they gave him. Math was like adding one plus one. Last week he noticed his jailers making all kinds of sudden improvements to the jail. There was simple math in that, too. A media tour was coming up. By the time the cameras got there, Mohammad and his mother would be gone.

    In jail, Mohammad wondered about things like where does the electricity come from and are the windows bullet proof? He would ask these questions to guards who carried little black books, and they would write his questions down. A few days later the guards would return with questions of their own. Was anyone planning to bomb Hutto jail?

    Hideous is the word Isenberg uses to describe the situation of the Hazahzas, the jail, and the prejudicial paranoia that surrounds a curious boy from Palestine and his family. Juma has not been allowed to talk to her husband for 100 days.

    Owing to poor construction and design of toilets and bathrooms, the smell of raw sewage is a nightly trauma at Hutto prison. Who can sleep with such a smell in the air? The temperature is never right. Either it’s too warm or too cold, except for the water, which is always too cold. And the sanitation of the cold-water shower room was very suspect to Juma as herds of men were exchanged for herds of women in bathing conditions that made her feel very humiliated.

    Confirming complaints made weeks ago by the Ibrahim family–who have since been released–Mohammad and Juma talked about prisoners being made to stand still for cell counts that always lasted too long because guards could not get the count right.

    “They are so hurt, so hurt,” says Isenberg as Mohammad’s words spill out. “It’s clear that the Hutto facility has the ability to destroy people, to break their will to want to live. It’s also clear that it will be shut down shortly.”

    Saturday will be “legal day” for the movement as Isenberg confers with attorneys about how to get the rest of the Hazahza family released from a prison in Haskell, Texas. Once again the New York attorneys Joshua Bardavid and Ted Cox are standing by if a federal habeas corpus motion is required.

    “I’m not used to meeting people who have been in jail for 100 days and who are perfectly innocent. I’m ashamed to be an American right now. But the more I see people start to care, the more I have hope.”

  • After the Ibrahim Family Reunion: The Suleimans and Hazahzas

    By Greg Moses

    IndyMedia Austin / Houston

    With the joyful news of an Ibrahim family reunion tonight–as father Salaheddin returns home from his lockup in Haskell–we remember two other families of Palestinian heritage whose lives were trashed by hardline immigration enforcement.
    First we remember the Suleiman family whose deportation to Jordan has exiled twin citizens of the USA age four.

    “They definitely would like to come back,” says Riad Hamad of the Palestine Children’s Welfare Fund, who purchased the plane tickets that allowed the family to leave at their own expense.

    “They didn’t want to leave the country, but they did want to live, and that’s why they left,” explained Hamad over the phone Friday afternoon. The 61-year-old father of the family, Adel, was receiving such inhumane treatment in Oklahoma jails that he feared for his life.

    Adel was born into a Palestinian refugee camp during the 1948 displacement of the Palestinian people, then in 1967 he was driven from the West Bank by war. And in 1991 he fled Kuwait when the first Gulf War hit there. Now he waits for his furniture to catch up to him in Amman, Jordan after being thrown out of the USA.

    In Dallas, Adel and his spouse had their future before them.

    “They had just purchased their first house,” says Hamad. “They put down $20,000.” Now the furniture from that house is all they have. Hamad will have the furniture shipped to them next week.

    “This is a disaster for them,” says Hamad. “The furniture will provide a sense of continuity.”

    Are they interested in returning to the USA?

    “Yes they are,” says Hamad quickly. “It’s not like they wanted to leave the country.”

    A relative who saw Adel at the Dallas airport on Jan. 29 as he was being deported with his exiled daughters said he looked like a famine picture.

    The pre-dawn operation that uprooted Adel from his American dream was called “Return to Sender.” But who sent Adel to America? And why should he not be invited to return with profound apologies from even the President himself?

    Hamad remembers trying to cheer up 17-year-old Ayman Suleiman, who was worried what would happen to his education.

    “I told him I have paid tuition for 20 Palestinian students to complete college and I would pay for his too,” says Hamad. “When Ayman heard me promise him an education, he dropped his head down for a minute or so to hide his tears.”

    “Get to Jordan, I told him. Find a high school and tell me about your college plans.”

    Hazahzas

    When Immigration and Customs Enforcement abruptly notified Hazahza family relatives Wednesday night that a mother and son would be release from the T. Don Hutto prison, Hamad was called to pick them up.

    Hamad knew the mother, Juma, because he had brought her favorite food to prison–Zaazatr. From the prison authorities she requested a tomato, “but she didn’t see a tomato in three months.”

    As Hamad drove Juma and her 11-year-old son, Mohammad, from the Hutto prison he heard the boy ask, “Mama am I dreaming?” First thing he asked for was a hamburger.

    Juma and Mohammad were last reported resting at the home of a relative in Dallas after a long night of driving made necessary because airlines would not issue them tickets since they lacked proper identification upon release.

    The rest of the Hazahza family sits at the prison in Haskell–father Radi and four adult children: 18-year-old Ahmad, 19-year-old Suzan, and 23-year-olds Mirvat and Hisham. They are the ones to free next.

    As for the Ibrahim children who tonight will see their father for the first time since early November, Hamad remembers the first time he saw them.

    “I saw those children behind bars and I was not allowed to touch them,” he said.

    “Even if I was a donkey with no feelings, I would hear this story and be moved.

    As a child in Beirut more than forty years ago, Riad Hamad would look out the window at camps filled with white tents.

    “What are those tents, Daddy?”

    “Those are the Palestinians, Riad. They are waiting to return home.”

    **************

    Note: to see daily videos from Palestine via laptops that Hamad has donated, visit marhabafrompalestine.com