As
the Biden administration scrambles to relocate thousands of Haitian
migrants camped in a small Texas border town, it's also looking for a
private contractor to help operate a migrant detention facility at the
U.S. Naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba — and to hire at least some
guards who speak Spanish and Haitian Creole.
The
Department of Homeland Security insists that there are no plans to
transfer Haitian migrants from the U.S.-Mexico border to Guantanamo Bay,
where the U.S. has long housed asylum-seekers encountered at sea.
Still, the contract solicitation published
last week has alarmed some immigrant advocates, who are already
critical of the Biden administration's decision to quickly expel more
than 1,000 Haitian migrants back to a country that is still reeling from recent disasters.
According
to the contract solicitation, the facility at Guantanamo Bay "will have
an estimated daily population of 20 people." But the service provider
should be prepared to "erect temporary housing facilities for
populations that exceed 120 and up to 400 migrants in a surge event.
This equipment includes tents and cots, and the contractor must be able
to have these assembled and ready with little notice."
The
solicitation specifies that "at least 10% of the augmented personnel
must be fluent in Spanish and Haitian Creole. Air transportation to/from
the facility is the sole responsibility of the service provider."
Since
the Sept. 11 attacks, Guantanamo Bay has been known primarily as the
site of a U.S. military prison where some detainees have been held for
years without trial.
But
the naval base is also home to a DHS immigration detention facility. In
the early 1990s, the base was used as a refugee camp for Haitians
fleeing by boat after the democratically elected president of Haiti,
Jean-Bertrand Aristide, was deposed in a military coup.
At
its peak, the refugee camp held more 12,000 Haitians under what
immigrant rights advocates described as deplorable conditions.
"Sending
people who are seeking protection to a place that is notorious for
being treated as a rights-free zone is the last thing that the Biden
administration should do," said Eleanor Acer, director of refugee
protection at the non-profit Human Rights First. "It is nothing more
than a blatant attempt to evade oversight, due process, human rights
protections and the refugee laws of the United States."
But
DHS insists the solicitation has nothing to do with the situation in
Del Rio, Texas, where migrants have crossed into the U.S.
"[DHS]
is not and will not send Haitian nationals being encountered at the
southwest border to the Migrant Operations Center (MOC) in Guantanamo
Bay," wrote Marsha Espinosa, the assistant secretary for public affairs at DHS, on Twitter.
The solicitation is simply "a typical, routine first step" in a contract renewal, she wrote.
3 comments:
DHS got caught trying to clean up Biden's mess.
So they expelled 1,000 out of 15,000. Where did the rest go? NOWHERE. They are now in this country, sucking up government services and taxpayer money.
I have friends down there. They said around 8000 ran back to Mexico. Who really knows? Once the herd started moving I'm sure they lost count.
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