What a waste of a life and a
career for Kirstjen Nielsen who
just got the boot as Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security—and with
such ghastly and horrific, life-long consequences to the families, and
especially the children, that have been unjustifiably damaged.
And how shameful and unacceptable
to have an administration that traffics in the politics of violence and
death. This is a death to the spirit, or actual death.
There is simply no moral universe
where catastrophe liberates society if, by definition, we mean a state of ruin
that is irremediable. Check out this
recent story in the Huffington Post on this cruel and
unnecessary harm for no other reason than to further traumatize families whose
lives were already up-ended by crises back home, Family
Separation Has Scarred These Kids For Life.
I'm glad that the The Leadership Conference
on Civil and Human Rights is keeping what is arguably the
beginnings of a chronology as much more will come to light in due time.
And what a horribly sad chapter in our story as a nation.
And thank God for social media that
helps us to continue exposing these crimes against not only children and
families, but an entire generation of thousands of tired, poor, and "huddled masses yearning to breathe free"
upon whom our sociopathic, white supremacist leadership has heaped paroxysms of anguish, misery, and despair.
My friends, however battered we
ourselves may feel from our daily news feeds that risk weighting us down
psychologically, emotionally, and, as a consequence, physically, my prayer and
meditation is for none of us, myself included, to succumb to indifference or
paralysis. For the day that we do, is the day that this administration
wins. After all, aren't we all witting or unwitting players in this
larger, abominable drama of death and violence?
Although we all surely must have our
moments of sorrow, torment, and affliction, let us not grow weary in the
righteous cause for justice and setting things right.
SĂ se puede! Yes we can!
-Angela Valenzuela
What a waste of a life and a
career for Kirstjen Nielsen who
just got the boot as Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security—and with
such ghastly and horrific, life-long consequences to the families, and
especially the children, that have been unjustifiably damaged.
And how shameful and unacceptable
to have an administration that traffics in the politics of violence and
death. This is a death to the spirit, or actual death.
There is simply no moral universe
where catastrophe liberates society if, by definition, we mean a state of ruin
that is irremediable. Check out this
recent story in the Huffington Post on this cruel and
unnecessary harm for no other reason than to further traumatize families whose
lives were already up-ended by crises back home, Family
Separation Has Scarred These Kids For Life.
I'm glad that the The Leadership Conference
on Civil and Human Rights is keeping what is arguably the
beginnings of a chronology as much more will come to light in due time.
And what a horribly sad chapter in our story as a nation.
And thank God for social media that
helps us to continue exposing these crimes against not only children and
families, but an entire generation of thousands of tired, poor, and "huddled masses yearning to breathe free"
upon whom our sociopathic, white supremacist leadership has heaped paroxysms of anguish, misery, and despair.
My friends, however battered we
ourselves may feel from our daily news feeds that risk weighting us down
psychologically, emotionally, and, as a consequence, physically, my prayer and
meditation is for none of us, myself included, to succumb to indifference or
paralysis. For the day that we do, is the day that this administration
wins. After all, aren't we all witting or unwitting players in this
larger, abominable drama of death and violence?
Although we all surely must have our
moments of sorrow, torment, and affliction, let us not grow weary in the
righteous cause for justice and setting things right.
SĂ se puede! Yes we can!
-Angela Valenzuela
TIMELINE: Nielsen’s Tenure of Abuse and Inhumanity
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE / LINK / TWEET
THIS
April 9, 2019
Contact: Shin Inouye, inouye@civilrights.org, 202.869.0398
April 9, 2019
Contact: Shin Inouye, inouye@civilrights.org, 202.869.0398
Source: The Daily Beast in a piece titled, "Kirstjen Nielsen’s Ouster Strengthens Stephen Miller’s Grip on President Trump’s Immigration Policy" |
WASHINGTON –Kirstjen Nielsen steps down as Secretary of Homeland Security with an indefensible legacy of cruel and inhumane civil and human rights violations. The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights outlined some of the most egregious actions during Nielsen's tenure, and calls for a fundamental change in the direction of the department.
“Secretary
Nielsen ripped children from their families and placed them in cages, yet Trump
doesn’t believe that she was inhumane enough,” said Vanita
Gupta, president and CEO of The Leadership Conference. “The next Homeland
Security Secretary must condemn the unconscionable civil and human rights
abuses that she implemented during her tenure – not try to outdo them, as
President Trump wishes. The Senate must hold the next nominee to the highest
standards and vote down any nominee who will continue Nielsen’s policies of
abuse and inhumanity.”
Here are some of the abuses
that Nielsen implemented and oversaw during her tenure as Secretary of Homeland
Security:
- December
21, 2017: The Trump administration considers a proposal to separate parents
from their children.
- April
6, 2018: The Trump administration announces the
“zero-tolerance” policy, ordering the Department of Homeland Security to
prosecute all adult migrants entering the country illegally. The new
policy leads to the separation of families.
- April
11, 2018: Nielsen denies that
there is a family separation policy in testimony before the House Homeland
Security Appropriations Subcommittee.
- April
20, 2018: The New York Times reports that
more than 700 children have been stripped away from their
parents since October 2017 – 100 of which are under the age
of 4.
- May
15, 2018: Nielsen defends family separation before
the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Committee.
- June
15, 2018: DHS reports that nearly 1,995 total children
were separated from their parents at the border from April 19 to May
31 under the “zero-tolerance” policy.
- June
18, 2018: Nielsen denies and refuses
to apologize for family
separation policy.
- June
20, 2018: “Tent
cities” are created to house separated children. Additionally,
DHS reports that
2,342 children were separated at the border from May 5 to June 9.
- June
20, 2018: Trump signs an executive order that he claims
will end family separation – but instead makes the situation
worse by instituting a new indefinite family detention policy.
- June
27, 2018: A judge orders an end to family separation. The
judge rules that children under the age of 5 must be reunited within 14 days
and children age 5 and older within 30 days – a deadline that the
administration would twice fail to meet (please refer to July 10, 2018 and
July 26, 2018).
- July
5, 2018: DHS officials report that records “linking children to
their parents have disappeared, and in some cases have been destroyed.”
- July
10, 2018: The Trump administration fails to meet the first court-ordered
deadline, reuniting only 38 children under the age of 5.
- July
2018: Office of Refugee Resettlement identifies 2,654 children for
reunification with their families.
- July
18, 2018: Reuters publishes than statements of
the abuses that Nielsen oversaw during her tenure as DHS Secretary,
including: physical and
emotional abuse, filthy
conditions, and inadequate food and water for children and families in immigration detention.
- July
26, 2018: The Trump administration fails
to meet the second court-ordered deadline, onlyreuniting 1,442 out of 2,551 migrant
children with their parents. On the same day, POLITICOreports that the Trump administration
deported 436 parents without their children.
- July
26, 2018: The
Trump administration claims that the parents of 711
children are “not eligible for reunification.”
- July
29, 2018: Reports reveal that U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials coercedparents
to sign documents they didn’t understand to deport them without their
children.
- August
2, 2018: The administration argues that
it is not responsible for reuniting the remaining children and suggests
that non-governmental organizations should do it instead.
- August
9, 2018: 572
children remain
separated from their parents.
- September
6, 2018: DHS and Department of Health and
Human Services announces its plan to withdraw from the
Flores Settlement Agreement, which is a set of protections for underage
migrant children in government custody.
- September
14, 2018: The
administration violates basic due process to families
that it deemed ineligible for reunification.
- September
25, 2018: An April 2018 DHS
memo reveals that the administration was aware that its “zero
tolerance” policy would result in family separations.
- October
10, 2018: DHS publishes the ‘public
charge’ rule in the Federal Register. Under
the rule, immigrants who apply for a green card or visa could be deemed a
‘public charge’ and turned away if they earn below 250 percent of the federal
poverty line and use any of a wide range of public programs.
- October
12, 2018: The Trump administration considers a new family separation policy.
- October
15, 2018: ACLU
reports that 120
children remain
separated from their parents – 50 with parents who were
deported and 70 whose parents were still in the United States.
- October
2018: HHS identifies 13 more children for
reunification.
- November
8, 2018: DHS
and the Justice Department announce an interim final rule to block people
from claiming asylum if they enter the United States outside legal ports
of entry.
- November
26, 2018: 60
Minutes reports that the administration lied about
when the zero tolerance policy started and how long it was in effect.
- November
26, 2018: Nielsen defends the use of tear gas at the
border.
- December
8, 2018: 7-year-old
Jakelin Caal Maquin dies of sepsis infection in CBP
custody.
- December
24, 2018: 8-year-old Felipe Gomez Alonzo dies of the flu and a bacterial
infection in CBP custody.
- December
2018: HHS identifies 149 more children for
reunification.
- January
17, 2019: The Office of the Inspector
General releases a report revealing that thousands
more children than were initially reported were separated from their
families.
- February
18, 2019: 45-year-old
migrant dies in CBP custody. Cause of death
unknown.
- February
21, 2019: The Texas
Civil Rights Project identifies 272 family separations in McAllen
since June 2018.
- February
26, 2019: The House Judiciary Committee
holds an oversight
hearing on Trump’s
family separation policy. The hearing finds that key officials never
expressed concern over family separation, that the administration
prioritized prosecuting parents over keeping families together, that no
trauma experts were consulted, and that separations continued without
child welfare expert input.
- March
6, 2019: In testimony before Congress,
Nielsen lies once again and admits she was “not familiar” with the
effects of toxic stress inflicted by family separation.
- March
6, 2019: Nielsen urges Congress to support the
president’s national emergency at the border.
- March
8, 2019: The court expands a class action lawsuit to
include thousands of children who were separated long before the
“zero-tolerance” policy was announced.
- March
18, 2019: 40-year-old migrant dies in CBP custody after being
diagnosed with flulike symptoms, liver failure, and renal failure.
- March
19, 2019: MSNBC reports that the Trump administration
tracked the reproductive cycles of migrant girls in custody.
The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human
Rights is a coalition charged by its diverse membership of more than 200
national organizations to promote and protect the rights of all persons in the
United States. The Leadership Conference works toward an America as good as its
ideals. For more information on The Leadership Conference and its member
organizations, visit www.civilrights.org.
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