In a message dated 1/29/2009 6:17:47 P.M. Central Standard Time,  
[email protected] writes:

NEWS RELEASE
Thursday, January 29,  2009

CONTACT
Catherine Tactaquin, (510) 465-1984 ext. 302

Laura Rivas, (510) 465-1984 ext.  304



Immigrant Rights Supporters Urge Obama
To End Raids, Restore  Rights


Thousands sign letter to President Obama calling for changes in  immigration 
enforcement in the first 100 days of new  Administration
(OAKLAND, CA) Immigrant rights  supporters are calling on President Barack 
Obama and his Administration  to protect the rights of immigrant workers, 
families and communities. An  "Open Letter" to President Obama, signed by over 
3,500 
individuals and  organizations from nearly all 50 states in the union, urges 
Obama and  his Administration to end immigration raids and suspend all 
detentions  and deportations in the first 100 days of his Administration.

The  letter, which is also being shared with key policy-makers, also calls on 
 President Obama to restore immigrants' due process rights and hold field  
hearings with immigrant communities to learn from them about the impacts  they 
suffer from immigration law enforcement.

"President Obama  must stop the cycle of punishment and implement 
humanitarian policies  and practices to uphold the rights of immigrant 
communities," 
declared  Catherine Tactaquin, Executive Director of the National Network for  
Immigrant and Refugee Rights (NNIRR), announcing the delivery of the  "Open 
Letter to President Barack Obama" during a a telephonic media  conference on 
Tuesday. [Click here to read the _Open Letter to President  Obama_ 
(http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?et=1102433444282&e=001T61WRTh-afnloQPwKFpiI59M4eb4oUKf_vY5K7RIr4ACQYmZarF
J2bakFPlEibn-nFs20doVtmR1DYyu81e-MQH0bVgroZ4q_WCZMQXTXoWBIxAyXL7FTzC1ivVduyELz
UtRyWrgsZeKow4_ikgpLPDg4ONmTkl-BrhW8QXGWog=) .]

NNIRR members and partners drafted the open letter as  part of a campaign to 
expose the massive immigration detention and  deportation system that the U.S. 
government has built over the last  decade. NNIRR is calling for 
accountability and other changes to end the  abuses.

Ms Tactaquin said, "We are calling on President Obama to  take decisive 
action to end the criminalization of immigrants,  de-linking immigration policy 
from the politics of national security.  President Obama moved swiftly to close 
the notorious Guantanamo prison;  we will urge him to also act quickly to end 
the abuse and trauma that  hundreds of thousands of immigrant workers are 
experiencing in detention  centers throughout the United States."

Ending Raids Will Not Be Enough to End  Abuses

In fiscal year 2008, the Department of  Homeland Security deported 349,041 
persons; almost 6,000, or less than  two per cent, were detained and deported 
through immigration work place  and other types of raids. However, ICE detains 
and deports the  overwhelming majority of immigrants through different 
strategies,  including collaboration with local police and other public 
agencies and  
employers.

"The result of raids and other types of immigration  enforcement is the same. 
ICE enforcement devastates families, undermines  our rights and traumatizes 
communities, disrupting the economy. Ending  ICE raids will not be enough; 
detentions and deportations must be put on  hold while the Obama Administration 
takes action to uphold our rights,"  Ms. Tactaquin concluded.

NNIRR presented several more speakers  who shared their stories exposing the 
grave injustices caused by  immigration enforcement in the interior and the 
border.

Criminalization of  Immigrants,
Militarization of Immigration and Border  Control

During the media briefing on the open  letter to President Obama, NNIRR had 
several speakers share stories of  the devastating effects detention and 
deportation have on immigrant  families.

Susan Gillis spoke about the case of Mr. Rebhy Abdel  Malak, an Egyptian man 
who was brutally beaten by U.S. Immigration and  Customs Enforcement (ICE) 
agents in an Atlanta detention center to force  him to sign away his rights and 
deport him. Ms. Gillis is advocate  working on behalf of Mr. Abdel Malak's 
family.

Rebhy Abdel Malak  came legally to the U.S. ten years ago with his family. He 
has three  children, two who are U.S. citizens, and petitioned for asylum 
after he  and his wife fled religious persecution in Egypt.

Ms. Gillis  emphasized, "Mr. Abdel Malak's case points to the humanitarian 
crisis  deepened by a lack of accountability in federal detention centers 
across 
 the country." Ms. Gillis told how Rebhy Abdel Malak, after errors made  by 
unscrupulous lawyers in his petition, was taken into custody over a  year ago 
and transferred to a remote jail in Alabama, separated from his  family in 
North Carolina. Mr. Abdel Malak is the family's sole  breadwinner; his wife and 
children have been traumatized by his  incarceration.

Ms. Gillis urged the immediate release of Mr.  Abdel Malak and all immigrants 
detained for status violations as part of  the letter's call to President 
Obama on immigrant's rights.

Betsy  Dewitt with Families for Freedom, an organization in New York 
advocating  with families directly affected by the detention and deportation 
regime,  
noted that "At least 15 percent of American families are 'mixed status,'  
meaning that at least one or more family member is an immigrant." Ms.  DeWitt, 
whose husband was deported over a year ago, echoed the urgency  of ending raids 
and the cruel separation of families caused by detention  and deportation.

Ms. DeWitt said that the ongoing criminalization  of immigrants - deepened by 
the 1996 laws such as Illegal Immigration  Reform and Immigrant 
Responsibility Act and the Anti-terrorism and  Effective Death Penalty Act - 
gives no 
respite to families whose loved  ones are being subject to deportation.

President Obama: End Raids, Restore the Rights  of Immigrants

"In this era of change, it is vital  that we work with the Obama 
Administration to educate the public and  return to American values of family 
unity and 
the rule of law. If we can  close Guantanamo, we can also close Hutto," Ms. 
Dewitt emphasized. "T.  Don Hutto" is a federal detention facility in Taylor, 
Texas, used to  jail immigrant families, including over 200 children.

Isabel  García from the Coalición de Derechos Humanos in Tucson denounced the 
 criminalization of immigrants and spoke out against "Operation  Streamline," 
a strategy implemented at the U.S.-Mexico border to  automatically jail 
migrants. Ms. García said that Streamline has  resulted in "criminal 
convictions of 
up to 70 persons per day,  essentially normalizing violations of the U.S. 
Constitution en masse."  In addition, she urged President Obama and the new 
administration to  "address immigration as a social, humanitarian and economic 
issue and  examine why last year 183 people died a horrific and unnecessary 
death  
attempting to cross the U.S.-Mexico border to reunite with  families."

Ms. García closed by saying, "Enforcement measures at  the U.S.-Mexico border 
and in the interior affect us all, immigrants or  not. Current immigration 
policies and laws continue to normalize the  deprivation of rights for  
immigrants."... 


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