--- On Mon, 11/17/08, New Orleans Workers Center for Racial Justice <[EMAIL 
PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: New Orleans Workers Center for Racial Justice <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Immigration Raid In Fargo, North Dakota Targets Courageous Survivors 
Of Trafficking
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Monday, November 17, 2008, 3:05 PM









New Orleans Workers' Center for Racial Justice

ALLIANCE OF GUESTWORKERS FOR DIGNITY 

ICE RAIDS: THE NEW FRONTIER 

IMMIGRATION RAID IN FARGO, NORTH DAKOTA TARGETS

COURAGEOUS SURVIVORS OF TRAFFICKING

Indian workers targeted for demanding dignity.
 


 Dear friends and allies,
 
Earlier this year, you supported the Indian guestworkers who risked everything 
in a heroic fight against human trafficking after Signal International (Signal) 
and its labor recruiters brought them to the Gulf Coast under false pretenses 
in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.  Despite their valiant efforts and your 
support, the Department of Justice (DOJ) has refused to grant them protections 
as victims of trafficking-including continued presence-and has not yet filed 
charges against any of the traffickers.  Now in a horrific example of what 
happens when victims are not protected, a group of the workers have been 
targeted in an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raid and face federal 
prosecution as a direct result of their public campaign.  We are asking for 
your support as these workers continue their fight for basic protections and 
for the DOJ and ICE to prosecute human traffickers and not their victims.  This 
workplace raid on trafficking
 victims further highlights this outgoing Administration's misguided 
priorities.  If change is coming under the Obama Administration, we must make 
sure these workers are included in it. 

When defense subcontractor Signal trafficked them to labor camps in the Gulf 
Coast and held them in forced labor, these workers fought back.  They escaped 
indentured servitude, triggering a major DOJ investigation into criminal 
trafficking. They walked from New Orleans to Washington, DC in the footsteps of 
Mahatma Gandhi, to show Congress the brutal realities of the US guestworker 
program.  And they launched a 29 day-long hunger strike, to pressure the DOJ to 
prosecute Signal on charges of criminal trafficking.

As a result of speaking out publically, a group of these men were targeted in 
an ICE raid. On October 28, 2008 - days before the presidential election - ICE 
arrested over 20 of these workers in a terrifying immigration raid in Fargo, 
North Dakota.  In line with their recent strategy, ICE charged them with 
federal crimes.   In a press conference after the raid, an immigration official 
charged the workers with stealing American jobs.  Now in federal custody, these 
courageous men face the threat of years in prison.  

These survivors of trafficking came forward voluntarily to report Signal to the 
DOJ.  Six months later, the DOJ is now prosecuting the trafficking victims, 
while no charges have been brought against the traffickers.  

At every step, ICE has aggressively countered the workers' organizing.   When 
Signal learned the workers were holding meetings, the company's armed guards 
imprisoned them, and attempted to deport them.  Signal stated it retaliated 
aggressively after consulting with ICE.  When workers visited a site honoring 
martyrs of the civil rights movement in Montgomery, Alabama on their way to 
Washington, DC, ICE terrorized them with a covert surveillance operation.  In 
addition, ICE has offered special protections for workers hand-picked by Signal 
to testify on behalf of the company while denying those same protections to 
worker testifying against the company. ICE has now gone a step further by 
targeting and detaining the workers who have come forward to report Signal to 
federal authorities.

The workers and their supporters are demanding:
 


The Department of Justice must release the workers immediately, and drop all 
charges. 
 


The Department of Justice must prosecute Signal International on charges of 
criminal trafficking and grant "continued presence" in the US to all 250 
trafficked workers - the basic minimum protection offered by law to victims of 
trafficking.
 


 ICE must release its hold on the detained workers and cease any further 
investigations of any of these guestworkers, and focus instead on investigating 
Signal and its agents.
 
ACT NOW:  The workers need your support!  You can help by:
 


Write to the workers in detention to show your support.  In order to stay 
strong, the workers need to know they have the community's support and people 
are looking out for their well being.  Remember that all letters will be read 
by jail personnel first.  The letter itself should be addressed to the Indian 
Worker Congress.  The envelopes should be addressed to:  Cass County Jail, 
Christopher Glory, 450 34th St, Fargo, ND 58103.   
 


Donate funds so that detained workers can stay in touch with their families 
during this difficult time.  Jail calling cards cost $.80 a minute to India.  
Donations can be made through the website for the New Orleans Workers' Center 
for Racial Justice: http://www.neworleansworkerjustice.org/



Click here to read a "Letter From Fargo Jail".
 
 


New Orleans Workers' Center for Racial Justice
803 Baronne Street 
Phone: (615) 423-0152, Facsimile: (504) 309-5205
New Orleans, Louisiana 70113
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