NEW: From @AlexYells, an indictment of the misleading reporting that has framed challenges at our border as a "crisis," and migration as inherently bad.
Read her take on how otherwise reputable outlets can shift toward ethical #immigration reporting.
"The prospect that people making the decision to flee for their lives are basing that decision on changes in U.S. immigration policy is both woefully self-centered and laughably wrong-headed." - @AlexYells
"Many journalists do understand how to report on the U.S. border in a way that is both informative and unexaggerated. @jacobsoboroff, for example, has reliably reported on the growing number of refugees [...] unable to enter the U.S. under the Biden admin's immigration policies."
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#NEW: Today, @humanrights1st & @NILC filed an amicus brief at the Supreme Court in a case challenging the so-called Migrant Protection Protocols (“MPP”), or “Remain in Mexico” policy.
“Every day this dangerous, illegal policy remains in place, the US govt is putting more lives at risk.” -@KennjiKizuka
We have tracked at least 1,314 public reports of murder, torture, rape, kidnapping & other violent attacks against people returned to Mexico under MPP to date.
The Trump administration has separated over 5,500 families under its draconian “zero tolerance” policy.
Years later, at least 545 children remain separated from their parents
They have delivered tens of thousands of asylum seekers to danger in Mexico, where @humanrights1st has found 1,314 public records of rape, murder, kidnapping, torture, and assault.
For decades, Human Rights First has represented refugees seeking asylum.
That's why we know that these proposals would further risk the health, safety, and very lives of our asylum-seeking clients, who depend on work authorizations to support themselves and their families.
Our client Michele* fled after being tortured in the Central African Republic. But without a work authorization, he had no way to support himself and became homeless.
After receiving his work authorization, he found a job with a car service and was able to secure housing.
Today, our client Robin testified before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights (@USCCRgov) to share what happened to him while he was locked behind bars.
This is his story, in his own words 👇
“In 2015 I fled my country, El Salvador, because my life was in danger. I did not know how to apply for asylum, and I did not know what would happen to me when I arrived here. But I came to the United States with the hope of being safe.”
“After I crossed the border, immigration held me in the hielera—a small cold room with more than 40 other people. We had to sit on the floor because they did not have beds or chairs. They only gave us aluminum blankets.”