US Immigration Agency Denies Hunger Strike At Texas Detention Center

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
A group of immigrant fathers, recently reunified with their sons and detained in Texas, have gone on a hunger strike to demand their
release, an immigrant rights group representing them said on Thursday.The U.S
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency said there had not been a hunger strike by residents of the Karnes County Residential
Center, about 51 miles (82 km) southeast of San Antonio."On August 2, a small group of fathers and their children (fewer than 50 total)
staged a brief sit-in and expressed their concerns about their immigration cases," ICE said in a statement
The residents "appreciated the information and dispersed."It was not immediately clear how many fathers were in the group.The immigrants
said they were being held at the detention center with no notification from authorities on their immigration status, the Refugee and
Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services (RAICES) said.Fathers had staged sit-ins, children were refusing to take part in school
activities, and some fathers had started a hunger strike, RAICES spokeswoman Jennifer Falcon said on a conference call with reporters on
Thursday."The dads are on a hunger strike and they are refusing to obey any directions from ICE and GEO guards," she said, referring to
private contractor GEO Group Inc which runs the center
The hunger strike was said to have begun on Wednesday.GEO did not respond to a request for comment.Asked later to respond to the ICE
statement, Falcon told Reuters: "There's definitely a strike."She added that the group had audio recordings of the fathers saying they were
on hunger strike.U.S
President Donald Trump has made a hard-line stance on immigration an integral part of his presidency and has promised to keep immigrants
targeted for deportation locked up "pending the outcome of their removal proceedings."Some 2,500 children were separated from their parents
as part of a "zero tolerance" policy toward illegal immigration that began in early May
Many of them had crossed the U.S.-Mexican border illegally, while others had sought asylum
The U.S
government said last week it had reunited just over half of them.Fathers at the Karnes center said they were misled into agreeing to
deportation as a condition of seeing their children again, RAICES said
Others said they had not been given the opportunity to apply for asylum.A federal judge in San Diego indefinitely suspended deportations
last month.© Thomson Reuters 2018(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is published
from a syndicated feed.)