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News Briefs: Pro-Immigrant Rallies, More Raids

by Weekly News Update (wnu [at] igc.org)
The DC demonstration was one of more than a dozen protests taking place across the country on Sept. 12 in what organizers called a National Day of Action.
Immigration News Briefs
Vol. 10, No. 23 - September 16, 2007

1. Pro-Immigrant Rallies in DC, Wisconsin
2. Iowa: Egg Factory Raided Again
3. Nebraska: Tyson Workers Arrested

Immigration News Briefs is a weekly supplement to Weekly News
Update on the Americas, published by Nicaragua Solidarity
Network, 339 Lafayette St, New York, NY 10012; tel 212-674-9499;
fax 212-674-9139; wnu [at] igc.org. INB is also distributed free via
email; contact nicajg [at] panix.com for info. You may reprint or
distribute items from INB, but please credit us and tell people
how to subscribe.

*1. PRO-IMMIGRANT RALLIES IN DC, WISCONSIN

On Sept. 12, some 150 activists (according to the Chicago Tribune) marched
through the House of Representatives' Rayburn Office Building, chanting for an
end to deportation raids. The protesters had arrived in buses from Chicago,
New York, Rhode Island and elsewhere. Capitol police arrested two Puerto Rican
activists from Chicago following a tussle near the office door of House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi, where demonstrators taped up a letter demanding she take action
for immigrant rights. The two were charged with disorderly conduct and
released. Pelosi was out of town.

The demonstration also included an afternoon prayer vigil on the National
Mall. The Washington demonstration was originally planned to be led by
Mexican activist Elvira Arellano, who left church sanctuary in Chicago in
August to help mobilize for it. But Arellano was arrested in Los Angeles
and deported on Aug. 19 [see INB 8/26/07]; on Sept. 12 she headed a
separate demonstration near the US border in Tijuana, Mexico. Her
8-year-old son, Saul, was part of the Washington protest, joining other
US-born children whose parents have been deported. [Chicago Tribune
9/13/07] Also attending were Chicago activist Emma Lozano, director of the
Centro Sin Fronteras, who works closely with Elvira Arellano, and Reverend
Walter Coleman, pastor of the Adalberto United Methodist Church in
Chicago, where Arellano lived in sanctuary from Aug. 15, 2006 to Aug. 15,
2007. [Womensenews.org 9/14/07]

The DC demonstration was one of more than a dozen protests taking place
across the country on Sept. 12 in what organizers called a National Day of
Action. About two dozen people rallied in Chicago. [Chicago Tribune
9/13/07] In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, an estimated 2,000 people rallied in
Mitchell Park to protest a new federal crackdown on workers who use
invalid social security numbers. Many people skipped work or school to
attend the protest, and participated in a "no shopping" boycott for
immigrant rights. The rally was organized by Voces de la Frontera, a local
immigrant rights group. [Marquette Tribune 9/13/07]

In Madison, Wisconsin, the Immigrant Workers Union staged a rally to raise
awareness of their continuing struggle to change immigration laws and
claim equal rights. IWU will continue leafleting and other actions in
Madison throughout the next month, culminating in a march to the Capitol
on Oct. 12. [Badger Herald 9/13/07]

Saul Arellano, Emma Lozano and Walter Coleman spoke at events in several
other cities in the days leading up to Sept. 12, including a
standing-room-only rally on Sept. 10 in Cleveland, Ohio, at the Nueva Vida
church. [People's Weekly World 9/13/07]

On Sept. 2, thousands of Latino immigrants and advocates from across the
Washington, DC area marched and rallied at the Prince William County
government center in Woodbridge, Virginia, to protest a strict new county
law, passed July 10, that seeks to deny many public services to
undocumented immigrants. Informal estimates placed turnout at 5,000 to
7,000. The event was organized by a group called Mexicans Without Borders,
which also called a week-long boycott of county businesses that were not
pro-immigrant or immigrant-owned. [AP 9/2/07; Washington Post 9/3/07]

*2. IOWA: EGG FACTORY RAIDED AGAIN

On Sept. 12, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents arrested 51
workers at the DeCoster egg processing plant near Clarion, Iowa, for being
present in the US without permission. Deportation hearings will be held
the week of Sept. 17 in Omaha, Nebraska, officials said. ICE spokesperson
Tim Counts said 43 workers were from Mexico, four were from Guatemala,
three from Honduras and one from El Salvador. Counts said all but two of
the workers were detained in city and county jails in Des Moines, Cedar
Rapids, and other nearby locations. A woman with child care issues and a
juvenile were released and ordered to appear at their hearings.

No DeCoster management employees were arrested. Counts said the raid was a
follow-up to a 2003 action against Austin "Jack" DeCoster, the company's
owner, who pleaded guilty in federal court in Sioux City to two counts of
aiding and abetting the continued employment of unauthorized workers and
is serving five years' probation. As part of the plea bargain, DeCoster
agreed to a five-year compliance program that allows ICE to access his
company's personnel records on demand and acknowledges the agency's right
to make unannounced inspections of his facilities. Agents have raided
DeCoster's egg processing and packing plants at least four times since
2001, arresting about 100 workers in all. About 36 workers were arrested
in the last raid in June 2006. [Des Moines Register 9/14/07; AP 9/14/07]

*3. NEBRASKA: TYSON WORKERS ARRESTED

On Sept. 11 and 12 in Lexington, Nebraska, ICE agents arrested 15
"immigration fugitives"--people who had failed to comply with prior
deportation orders--and one additional immigrant who was found to be in
the US without permission. All 16 were citizens of Guatemala or El
Salvador. The arrests were made at homes and at five different businesses,
including the Tyson meatpacking plant in Lexington. Earlier in the week,
ICE agents visited Tyson's Lexington plant with questions about six
workers, Tyson spokesperson Gary Mickelson told Meatingplace.com. During
the Sept. 11-12 sweep, ICE arrested four workers at the Tyson plant who
were among the six being sought. ICE spokesperson Tim Counts claimed the
action was not a raid at the Tyson Foods facility. "These were all
absconders who happened to be employees at Tyson," he said.
[CattleNetwork.com 9/14/07 from Meatingplace.com; ICE News Release
9/13/07]

----------------------------------------------------------------
END

Contributions toward Immigration News Briefs are gladly accepted:
they should be made payable and sent to Nicaragua Solidarity
Network, 339 Lafayette St, New York, NY 10012. (Tax-deductible
contributions of $50 or more may be made payable to the A.J.
Muste Memorial Institute and earmarked for "NSN".)

**************************************************************************
ORDER "The Politics of Immigration: Questions and Answers," a new book by
the editors of Immigration News Briefs and Weekly News Update on the
Americas, out now on Monthly Review Press: for details see
publisher website: http://monthlyreview.org/politicsofimmigration.htm
book website: http://thepoliticsofimmigration.org
authors' blog: http://thepoliticsofimmigration.blogspot.com
**************************************************************************

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