Category: Uncategorized

  • The Terror of Suzi Hazahza: Why Her Family Must be Freed

    By Greg Moses

    CounterPunch / ElectronicIntifada / DissidentVoice

    Tasting the food that Suzi Hazahza cooked for him on that first Thursday in November, Reza Barkhordari couldn’t have been more joyful. He went to Suzi’s house every night after work, to sit with her whole family. And each night, the wedding drew a day closer.

    “We met at a local Middle Eastern coffee shop in Richardson, Texas called the Al-Afrah,” recalls Reza over the telephone. “That’s where I saw her for the first time, and it was instant connection. It was so strong that Suzi’s mother noticed and helped in connecting the two of us. Shortly after that Suzi and I both realized it was something that was meant to be, and we would be spending our whole lives together. That was on August 6, 2005.”
    “I proposed to her on August 6, 2006, our first anniversary. My mother encouraged me to do it, and she sent a diamond ring to Suzi. We were to be married over the Christmas holidays.”

    In preparation for the wedding, Reza invited the Hazahza family to move closer to his home in Plano, where it would be easier to keep everyone in daily contact. On the first Monday in November, they were to close on a home in Frisco. What American dream could have seemed more complete?

    The first Friday of November, however, found Reza driving to the Dallas offices of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in search of the love of his life. Suzi and her entire family had been rounded up at gunpoint.

    There was father Radi, a 60-year-old refugee from Palestine–a proud provider who had seen better days as a banker in Jordan–now working as a state-certified car inspector. And mother Juma, the one who had steered her daughter toward love, and who shared Suzi’s delicate preferences for freshly-cooked food.

    There was sister Mirvat, a 24-year-old newlywed who still lived at home because the religious rites for her marriage had not been completed. She had graduated with honors from North Lake Community College and was running the office of a local insurance agent.

    There was brother Hisham, a 23-year-old sales whiz and prized manager for a cell phone company who was moving rapidly from management into ownership, on the verge of opening his own store. And there were younger brothers Ahmad and Mohammad, ages 17 and 11.

    Like two other Palestinian families in Dallas, all of them had been rousted from bed at gunpoint and marched out the door in their bedclothes. They were locked away, Reza was told. He could not see Suzi on Friday.

    On Saturday, Reza drove again to Dallas ICE, hoping to see Suzi and her family. But no, that was impossible. Then on Sunday ICE gave Reza a little hope. Suzi had been moved to the Rolling Plains Detention Center in Haskell, Texas along with her two oldest brothers, her sister, and her father. Visiting hours lasted until 4:00 pm. If Reza could get there before 4:00, said ICE, then he could see Suzi.

    Reza headed West in his car, calling a friend on his cell phone to get directions as he drove into afternoon sun. It was already past noon, and he had a four-hour drive in front of him. If he went just a little bit faster, he could make it in time, and he did, pulling into the immigration jail at 3:45 pm. But it would take ten minutes to get Suzi, explained the guards. And despite Reza’s begging, they told him the visit would not be worth the trouble. Dejected, Reza drove back home.

    For the next five weekends Reza planned his visits to Haskell carefully. He drove from Dallas on Friday night and visited with the Hazahza men on Saturday. Then on Sunday he met his beloved Suzi.

    One week he recalls Suzi came to the meeting with a fever and cough. She explained that she tried to get medical help but without luck. So Reza made some phone calls and complained. When Suzi’s younger brother reported blood in his urine, Reza called about that, too.

    After making complaints to ICE, Reza completed his fifth week of visits. He had no way of knowing that after the fifth visit, things for Suzi would suddenly get worse. She called from Haskell begging her fiancé never to come see her again.

    After the fifth visit from Reza, Suzi Hazahza had been subjected to a full body-cavity search.

    To this day, Suzi Hazahza refuses all visitors. She will not see the love of her life, Reza. She will not see her mother Juma, recently released from the T. Don Hutto jail in Taylor, Texas. Nor will she see her baby brother Mohammad who was released with Juma. She will not risk another visitor because she is determined to never again let the guards at Haskell prison search her like that again.

    New York attorneys Joshua Bardavid and Ted Cox will return to Texas next week to file federal habeas corpus motions in behalf of Suzi Hazahza and her family. The motions they filed for the Ibrahim family in early February worked very well, proving that ICE had no good reason for taking them to jail. Not only were all the Ibrahims freed from Hutto and Haskell both, but Juma and Mohammad Hazahza were also freed from Hutto, two days before a press tour there.

    In the coming weeks, as a protest movement grows around the issue of children in prison, let us not forget that 20-year-old Suzi has been wrongfully imprisoned, too. To quit the terror of Suzi Hazahza, she and the rest of her family deserve to be immediately freed.

    What is it like for Reza to think about Suzi these days? He takes a call from her every night. Last night he put her on the line with Juma and Mohammad in order to continue this interview.

    “You have to understand, this is not your standard strip search,” explains Reza. “What they do makes her extremely uncomfortable.” And how did that chilling phone call from Suzi make him feel, when the love of his life begged him to visit no more? “I felt like I was on fire,” he says. “There’s so much pain. Just to be honest with you, I am literally sick to my stomach.”

    And with each night’s phone call from Haskell to Dallas, the marriage of Reza and Suzi, the meant-to-be lovers, slips further away….

  • Hutto Vigil to End the Lease: Jan. 25

    email from Jay J. Johnson-Castro, Jan. 20, 2007

    Hola y’all…

    You’re receiving this because you know about the immoral and illegal incarceration of children from 6 months old and on up…from some 20 different countries…at the Hutto prison camp in Taylor , TX .

    We have all recently learned that the Williamson County lease agreement with Correctional Corporation of America (CCA) expires in 11 days…on Jan. 31.

    We want to encourage the Williamson County Commissioners to champion the freedom of the children. They can be their heroes…on the local, statewide, national and even international levels. All they have to do is show the courage to say NO to the practice of holding children in the Hutto prison camp.
    Or…they can be viewed as accomplices of this demented practice of imprisoning children on American soil…right here in Texas …right in their own county…for profit. They have the legal authority to make a difference. We trust that they will?

    So…one month after the Christmas Eve Vigil…we will be holding a new vigil. A “Don’t renew the lease to imprison children for profit!!!”. “Chertoff and the ICE Company…or the children”. “Not one more day of imprisoning children”. ”ICE and CCA violating International Children’s Rights”. Or…whatever else you feel best describes your reason for participating in this vigil.

    After considering two dates…almost all prefer an early evening vigil on January 25. Some have already made arrangements to be there. The vigil will officially be held between 5:30 and 6:30pm. That way working folks who would like to can attend.

    One of those who will be attending is reporter Sarah Bush. Sarah will be interviewing those in attendance at the 25th vigil…for the program “Latino USA” that will air nationally on NPR.

    For those of Williamson County who oppose the incarceration of children in the Hutto prison camp, here’s a suggestion. What if you draft and deliver a letter to the Commissioners Court this coming Tuesday, asking/requesting/petitioning/demanding them to give 120 days notice to ICE…and NOT renew the lease with CCA?

    Come join us. Bring a banner. Bring a poster. Sun sets about 6pm.

    Please feel free to share…and extend this invitation.

    Let our presence be seen and let our voices be heard. The international community is watching to see how grassroots America responds to this immoral and criminal conduct that has being committed by the Federal-Corporate Complex and their money laundering schemes. They have been observing that “We the people of the United States of America ” really do care about freedom and justice…and that we do not believe in imprisoning children…let alone for profit!!!

    Now the international community will observe how we employ democratic principles, exercise our freedoms and our rights…with the weapons of reasoning, truth and information sharing. Along with a deep conviction of the heart…we will bring a halt to this and other similar demented practices.

    Jay

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    The Border Ambassador

    Connecting.the.dots…making.a.difference…

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Jay J. Johnson-Castro, Sr.

    Del Rio, Texas, USA
    Ciudad Acuña, Coahuila , Mexico

  • Thank You for Our Busiest Month

    Videos by Matthew Gossage of the First Vigil to Shut Down Hutto have been posted recently at YouTube, please see links on right sidebar of our home page.

    2007 marks the tenth anniversary of the Texas Civil Rights Review. Throughout
    the years, our motivation has remained the same. We want to make sure that some
    issues and arguments not communicated by the corporate media get represention
    on the internet. Along the way we have provided a few stories and perspectives
    that make distinctive contributions to the civil rights struggle in Texas. And
    a healthier Texas makes for a healthier world. In January we are looking at record-breaking page views (for us, they are record
    breaking) making this our busiest month yet. Jay Johnson-Castro has brought an
    audience with him, and we can see the difference it makes.

    Although the corporate media is nearly unanimously evading affiliation with Palestinian
    families imprisoned in Texas, the story of the Ibrahims, Suleimans, and Hazahzas
    is nevertheless traveling the globe at the speed of light. How is the word spreading?

    To begin with, Austin-area activists called a
    Dec. 16 vigil
    ouside the T. Don
    Hutto prison camp for immigrant families. Then Del Rio entrepreneur Jay Johnson-Castro
    heard about it and volunteered to walk from the Capitol to the vigil, which he
    did, mostly alone.

    Then Juan Castillo of the Austin-American Statesman wrote a story reporting that
    the Hutto jail was populated with people who had entered the USA illegally.

    Castillo’s report prompted Dallas attorney John
    Wheat Gibson to fire off an email
    pointing out to the reporter that some
    families in the jail had in fact entered the USA legally. Johnson-Castro distributed
    that email, we posted it right away, and we have been collecting materials about
    the Palestinian families since then. (Even though, I don’t think the Statesman
    has mentioned the Palestinian families yet.)

    IndyMedia has been a very important space for distributing news about this story.
    And editors at CounterPunch, Dissident
    Voice
    , Electronic
    Intifada
    , and Uruknet have been very supportive with their re-postings of our work.

    Then came Marisa Treviño’s Dec. 19 overview
    at Lista Latina
    . From there
    the story has spread to important websites such as Infowars, XicanoPwr, Aztlan
    Electronic News
    , and blogs such as Texas
    Kaos
    and PhoenixWoman.

    Jesse Salmeron’s
    video
    of the Christmas Eve vigil has been warmly linked around
    the blogosphere. When the woman from Dallas introduces the child she has
    brought with her to the vigil, she reaches right into your heart. And everything
    changes.

    Last but never least is Flashpoints host
    Dennis Bernstein who moderates a wonderful program for KPFA and Pacifica
    affiliates. Audio
    links to his progam
    help complete the package
    of materials available for people finding this news for the first time.

    Of course, the trouble with thanking people in a crowded room is that you are
    sure to have failed to mention all who deserved it. So please take the names
    as indicators of a spirit that is not at all limited to the entities named above.–gm

  • How to Complain about ICE Prison Conditions

    ICE Detention Standards Violation Complaint Process

    Cite as “AILA InfoNet Doc. No. 07011068 (posted Jan. 10, 2007)”

    HOW DO I COMPLAIN TO AUTHORITIES ABOUT DETENTION STANDARDS VIOLATIONS AND RELATED ABUSES?

    WHY IS IT IMPORTANT THAT I DO THIS?

    DHS has set up a simple and straight-forward procedure for voicing complaints about detention standard violations. Following these procedures provides DHS with the opportunity to remedy the violations. It also allows for further constructive advocacy on issues which are not resolved. In addition to reporting the violations to the appropriate DHS authorities below, we hope you will send a copy of your complaint to the National Immigrant Justice Center so that advocates can track how DHS is responding to complaints.
    Report Violation to Local ICE: Try to resolve any detention standards violation with your local ICE offices. Document those attempts and ICE responses even if such documentation is quite simple (e.g., copies of e-mail correspondence; notation of a phone call, message left, and whether the call was returned).

    If Violations Are Unresolved At the Local Level, Report the Problem to ICE Headquarters: If the local authorities are non-responsive or fail to take appropriate action, report the problem to ICE headquarters. Such grievances should be submitted in writing or by e-mail and contain detailed information about the issue at hand and all prior attempts to solve the problem with local authorities.

    Please direct these complaints to Mr. Timothy Perry, Acting Chief of the Detention Acquisition and Support Branch, ICE Office of Detention and Removal, U.S. Department of Homeland Security, 801 “I” Street, Suite 980, Washington, D.C. 20536. Tel: 202.732.2912; E-mail: timothy.perry@dhs.gov.

    For complaints concerning medical and mental health care, advocates should copy Captain Philip Jarres, Branch Chief of Field Operations for the United States Public Health Service, 1220 L Street NW, Suite 500, Washington DC 20005. Tel: 202.732.0100; E-mail: philip.jarres@dhs.gov.

    File a complaint with the DHS Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties (OCRCL): Complaints on detention standards violations which are unresolved at the local level should also be filed with the DHS Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties. Complaints should be submitted in writing or e-mail to: Department of Homeland Security, Mail Stop #0800, Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, Washington, DC 20528. For packages/overnight deliveries, contact the office at Tel: 202.401.1474, 202.401.0470 (Local TTY); Toll Free: 1.866.644.8360, 1.866.644.8361 (TTY); E-mail: civil.liberties@dhs.gov.

    In addition, complaints that relate to abuses by ICE and other law enforcement officials; profiling on the basis of race, ethnicity, or religion; and other due process violations should be sent to OCRCL at this address as well.

    Website: www.dhs.gov/xabout/structure/editorial_0373.shtm

    After reporting the complaint to DHS, PLEASE send a copy to the National Immigrant Justice Center. This allows advocates to track the process: The National Immigrant Justice Center will keep a record of all issues brought to ICE headquarters and OCRCL. Please send a “bcc” of your e-mail correspondence, or a hard copy of any other correspondence, to Tara Magner, Director of Policy, National Immigrant Justice Center, 208 S. LaSalle Street, Suite 1818, Chicago, IL 60604. Tel: 312.660.1363; Fax: 312.660.1505; E-mail: tmagner@heartlandalliance.org.

    Prepared January 2007

    Forwarded to TCRR by John Wheat Gibson

  • White House: Hutto ''Best with What You've Got''

    Clipped from the White House Press Briefing of Feb. 13, 2007

    Q I wanted to ask you, there have been some stories lately about an ICE detention facility outside of Austin, Texas, where asylum-seekers have been kept in prison-like conditions — it is a converted prison, although the bars are not kept closed, as it would be in prison. Women and children are kept in garb that is likened to prison outfits. Is the President comfortable with the idea that asylum-seekers, particularly children, are kept in conditions —
    MR. SNOW: Well, as you probably know, in the past, children had been separated from their families. What we’re actually trying to do is to keep them together. We also have been concerned about making sure that they’re kept in humane and sanitary conditions and they’re clothed and fed. And all that is as you would expect. But one of the things we’re trying to do is to keep families together. When you have a large number of people in a facility like that, it does create challenges, and we’re trying to do our best with it.

    Q Wouldn’t it be better to find another type of facility?

    MR. SNOW: Such as?

    Q Dormitory —

    MR. SNOW: Sports stadium?

    Q — I don’t know.

    MR. SNOW: The point is, it’s difficult to find facilities, and you have to do the best with what you’ve got.

    Q Thank you, Tony.

    END 12:32 P.M. EST