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View Full Version : Minnesotans counter Trump with ‘No more deportations’ protest



ckaihatsu
26th March 2017, 14:12
Minnesotans counter Trump with ‘No more deportations’ protest (http://fightbacknews.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=a29530af96a02fc55d345e735&id=dde623c002&e=d323598fe4)

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By staff

St. Paul, MN - Seventy people protested outside the Whipple Federal Building, March 24, to send the message “No more deportations” and “ICE out of our communities” to the Trump administration. The emergency response protest was called just two days earlier in response to local provocations by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and its umbrella organization, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

The Star Tribune newspaper reported that last week ICE detained 26 immigrants in Minnesota as part of a sweep in the Midwest. Last week the Trump administration also announced they’ll send extra immigration judges to 12 places, including Minnesota, to try to speed up deportations. And on the morning of March 22, morning at least ten DHS police were on the Green Line of the light rail train during morning rush hour, which spread panic and outrage. In response to these developments, the emergency response protest was called by the No More Deportations campaign of the Minnesota Immigrant Rights Action Committee (MIRAC).

Protesters gathered at the Fort Snelling light rail station and marched to the nearby Whipple Federal Building, which houses the ICE operations center for Minnesota and surrounding states. When ICE detains immigrants, this is where they are taken for processing before being sent to another jail to await their hearing with a judge and possible deportation.

In front of the federal building, immigration lawyer Danielle Briand talked about a group of five of the 26 immigrants detained last week in Minnesota. Briand had recently visited the men at the jail, which is hours away from the Twin Cities, making it difficult for lawyers or family to meet with them and help them. She recounted the heartbreaking decisions their families now face, with parents separated from their partners and their small children, and called on people to continue to protest in the streets to stop these injustices.

A speaker from the Interfaith Coalition on Immigration urged people to continue protesting against deportations and led people in the chant, “Not on our watch!” He also pointed out the hypocrisy of ICE using the Whipple Federal Building for their oppressive operations since the building is named after Henry Whipple, an Episcopal bishop who was a bold leader in speaking out against the injustice of the U.S. government’s war and genocide against Native Americans in the 1800s.

Finally, a representative of the MIRAC No More Deportations campaign said that the main project the campaign is working on is building a rapid response network to respond to ICE operations and raids as they’re happening, and encouraged people to get involved. The network is being built in partnership with several other immigrant rights and community organizations, and trainings have already begun to prepare people to respond in an organized and powerful way to ICE’s presence in Minnesota.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ckaihatsu
28th March 2017, 14:51
Detained immigrants should have access to an attorney, food and water (sign the petition)


Tell Congress: Pass the Access to Legal Counsel Act (https://act.credoaction.com/sign/legal_counsel?t=1&akid=22295.247355.0I8VzM)

The petition to Congress reads:

“I urge you to pass the Access to Legal Counsel Act as soon as possible. Immigrants affected by Trump’s racist, xenophobic and anti-Muslim policies should have the right to access an attorney and be given food and water if detained by federal officials.”

Add your name:

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Dear Chris,

No food, no water, no access to legal counsel. We can’t let Trump’s racist right-wing government continue to violate our civil liberties.

Reports from immigrants arrested and detained at airports when Trump’s first Muslim ban took effect reveal that federal agents denied many people food, water and access to legal counsel for days. Federal courts have now struck down two versions of Trump’s xenophobic, unconstitutional Muslim ban but we can’t just sit back and let these atrocious violations go unchecked.

Sen. Kamala Harris and Rep. Pramila Jayapal have introduced the Access to Legal Counsel Act, which would give immigrants detained by federal agents at U.S. borders and in detention centers the right to access legal counsel and prohibit immigration officials from denying them food and water.1 Congress must protect people from Trump’s cruel anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim policies, and passing the Access to Legal Counsel Act is a good first step.

Tell Congress: Muslims and immigrants should be treated with dignity. Pass the Access to Legal Counsel Act. Click here to sign the petition. (https://act.credoaction.com/sign/legal_counsel?t=4&akid=22295.247355.0I8VzM)

Under Trump’s Muslim bans, immigration officials:2

- Refused to give food to a Syrian father and his daughters and tricked him into signing documents that waived his family’s right to enter the United States with valid visas.

- Denied a Sudanese health care worker living in Ohio access to an attorney and sent her back to Sudan where she had been visiting family.

- Lied to an attorney attempting to contact his client, a Jordanian national who should not have been affected by the travel ban but was sent to Frankfurt, Germany after immigration officials noticed he was born in Syria.


Recent media reports indicate that Customs and Border Patrol agents are harassing travelers, including United States citizens, at border crossings by demanding cell phone and social media passwords. In recent weeks, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents have arrested undocumented immigrants at their children’s schools, in hospitals and outside places of worship. This is not normal. This is not okay.

There’s no doubt that these blatant civil liberties violations will continue if Congress doesn’t act. Trump’s Department of Justice is planning to appeal the latest injunctions and attempt to restore the Muslim ban. His rogue deportation force keeps terrorizing immigrants at our borders and in communities across the country.

The recent collapse of Trumpcare showed that we can block the Trump agenda when Democrats stay united, stand up for progressive values and fight alongside the vulnerable. Add your support for the Access to Legal Counsel Act now to keep the momentum going.

Tell Congress: Muslims and immigrants should be treated with dignity. Pass the Access to Legal Counsel Act. Click the link below to sign the petition.

https://act.credoaction.com/sign/legal_counsel?t=6&akid=22295.247355.0I8VzM

Thank you for all you do,

Nicole Regalado, Campaign Manager
CREDO Action from Working Assets (http://act.credoaction.com/go/109?t=7&akid=22295.247355.0I8VzM)


Add your name:

Sign the petition ► (https://act.credoaction.com/sign/legal_counsel?t=8&akid=22295.247355.0I8VzM)


References

Sarah D. Wire, “Sen. Kamala Harris pushes to guarantee access to legal counsel for those detained upon entry to the U.S.” Los Angeles Times, Feb. 9, 2017.
Nicole Hensley, “Travelers held during Trump ban recall being denied food, lawyers,” New York Daily News, Feb. 8, 2017.

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ckaihatsu
28th March 2017, 15:01
Japanese American and American Muslim solidarity march (http://fightbacknews.us1.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=a29530af96a02fc55d345e735&id=144668c3d5&e=d323598fe4)

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By staff

San José, CA - On March 25, 200 people marched from San Jose Japantown to San Jose City Hall to express the solidarity between Japanese Americans and American Muslims. Since the election of Donald Trump, many Japanese Americans have been mobilized to oppose the anti-Muslim government policies such as the travel ban from majority-Muslim countries. The march was sponsored by the Nihonmachi Outreach Committee (NOC) and the South Bay Islamic Association (SBIA).

As people assembled for the march, Susan Hayase - former NOC chair and the vice-chairperson of the Civil Liberties Public Education Fund in the period after the fight for redress and reparations - emceed a short program that included welcomes by Reverend Shinya Goto of the First United Methodist Church and Faisal Yazadi of the Evergreen Islamic Center.

The lead banner expressed the theme of the day: “1942-2017, 75 years of resistance. No to concentration camps. No to Islamophobia.” On the way to city hall, the marchers chanted “Hey hey, ho ho, Islamophobia has got to go!” and “Two, four, six, eight, the fight for justice will not wait!” People joined the march along the way.

Once at city hall, emcee began the rally saying, “Welcome, and thank you so much for being here! My name is Lisa Washio-Collette, and on behalf of the Nihonmachi Outreach Committee, we thank you for attending this grassroots day of solidarity between Japanese Americans and American Muslims! The Nihonmachi Outreach Committee is a progressive organization based in the San Jose Japanese American community that is dedicated to educating the public about the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, and as a consequence, is committed to defending all people on issues of civil rights, equality, justice, tolerance and peace. We are grateful to be co-sponsoring this event with the South Bay Islamic Association.”

The rally was co-emceed by Zahra Billoo, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR). Other speakers at the rally included Judy Mine, Silicon Valley Japanese American Citizens League (JACL); Faisal Yazadi (EIC); Masao Suzuki (NOC); Susan Hayase; Fumiaki Tosu, Casa de Clara Catholic Worker; Jesus Ruíz, People Acting in Community Together (PACT); Ash Kalra, State Assembly District 27 that includes Japantown; Tom Oshidari, San Jose JACL; and Robert Greenfield, African American Community Service Agency.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ckaihatsu
19th April 2017, 19:55
Entering the US? Passwords please.


Access Now


Chris —

In just under 100 days in office, the Trump administration has implemented some truly awful policies at the U.S. borders, and it appears it is just getting warmed up. Department of Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly is now floating a proposal that would require visitors to the U.S. to provide passwords to social media accounts as a condition for entry.

That idea is just terrible for human rights and for basic digital security. That’s why we’re launching FlyDontSpy.com with dozens of coalition partners.

We’re asking you to speak out, sign the petition, and tell Secretary Kelly to protect human rights and reject the collection of passwords for entry into the United States.

A password-for-entry rule would harm a wide range of human rights: the rights to privacy, freedom of expression, freedom of association, of thought, of religion, and of movement. It is outrageous, wholly unacceptable policymaking, and we can’t let it stand.

https://aaf1a18515da0e792f78-c27fdabe952dfc357fe25ebf5c8897ee.ssl.cf5.rackcdn.c om/1921/FlyDontSpy_Action_Button.jpg?v=1492537368000 (https://www.e-activist.com/ea-action/broadcast.record.message.click.do?ea.url.id=905066&ea.campaigner.email=boBFmXJG0Szuya%2FTZFVW597cBTh3 KwkR&ea.campaigner.id=g2tEHpuQy0SZkArzVWMSmA==&ea_broadcast_target_id=0)

Few of us would give direct access to our social media accounts even to our closest loved ones. With that kind of access, federal agencies would see your private direct messages; which private groups you belong to (and who else is in the group); your profile and the profiles of your friends and connections; the activity logs that show what you’ve done using the account; and much more. If they wanted to, they could even pretend to be a visitor, posting or sending messages from an impacted account.

Turning over your passwords like that would reveal not just your own private information, but also that of everyone you interact with on a private level. Imagine how devastating that would be for people with sensitive information about others, like human rights defenders, lawyers, journalists, activists, and dissidents.

This kind of policy would have a deep chilling effect on free expression, and the privacy concerns extend far beyond the search at the border. (Who’s to say federal agencies couldn’t use the passwords again long after the initial search, or install malware on devices to allow for access later?) Further, it would be a digital security nightmare by creating a government-operated database with all our passwords! It would encourage other countries to implement retaliatory policies, and stifle both tourism and the tech industry. And in the end, a program like the one Kelly proposes would likely fail to achieve any real security goal.

We can’t let a rule like this — that would crush human rights, harm digital security, mutilate immigration standards around the globe, and damage the economy — get any closer to reality.

Tell Secretary Kelly to drop his password-for-entry proposal.

In solidarity,

Nathan White
Access Now

P.S. Read more about why collecting passwords would be dangerous for human rights and cyber security here.

Spread the word! Forward this action alert to a friend.

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You are receiving this email because you are subscribed to receive Access Now action alerts. Click here to unsubscribe or adjust your subscription preferences.

Access Now defends and extends the digital rights of users at risk around the world. Your support makes a difference. Donate here. (https://www.e-activist.com/ea-action/broadcast.record.message.click.do?ea.url.id=905075&ea.campaigner.email=boBFmXJG0Szuya%2FTZFVW597cBTh3 KwkR&ea.campaigner.id=g2tEHpuQy0SZkArzVWMSmA==&ea_broadcast_target_id=0)

Contact us at [email protected] or PO Box 115, New York, NY 10113.

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ckaihatsu
19th April 2017, 20:09
Sign the petition: Stop Trump’s assault on civil liberties


CREDO action


Stop illegal cell phone searches at the border

The petition to Congress reads:

"U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents have been conducting illegal searches of American citizens’ private data at the border in clear violation of the Constitution and a landmark Supreme Court ruling. Pass Sen. Ron Wyden’s ‘Protecting Data at the Border’ Act immediately."

Add your name:

Sign the petition ► (https://act.credoaction.com/sign/illegal_border_search?t=2&akid=22698.247355.VWbkxU)


https://act.credoaction.com/sign/illegal_border_search?t=3&akid=22698.247355.VWbkxU (https://act.credoaction.com/sign/illegal_border_search?t=3&akid=22698.247355.VWbkxU)


Dear Chris,

In brazen disregard for the Constitution and our civil liberties, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) agents have been forcing travelers entering the country to hand over the passwords to their cell phones and other devices without a warrant at an alarming rate.1

The government has absolutely no right to search and seize our private property, let alone snoop through our lives on social media, view our private photos or download our personal data, without probable cause and a warrant.

Sen. Ron Wyden recently introduced legislation that would prohibit law enforcement from barring entry to Americans who refuse to provide their passwords at the border and explicitly require a search warrant before any phone owned by a U.S. citizen is searched.2 Without this critical legislation, Trump’s out-of-control CBP agents will continue violating the Constitution, our privacy and Fourth Amendment rights. The CBP must be reined in immediately.

Tell Congress: Pass the Protecting Data at the Border Act. Click here to sign the petition. (https://act.credoaction.com/sign/illegal_border_search?t=4&akid=22698.247355.VWbkxU)

CBP believes that your Fourth Amendment rights don’t apply at the border and claims it has the right to search, confiscate and download personal data from devices without a warrant or probable cause, regardless of citizenship or immigration status. According to the American Civil Liberties Union, American citizens do not have to comply with CBP demands to hand over their passwords, however, CBP has been detaining citizens for longer periods of time and seizing devices for weeks or months.3

Immigrants, foreign tourists and Muslims fare even worse at the border, as CBP carries out Trump’s racist war on immigrants and Muslims. Non-citizens at the border who do not divulge passwords risk being turned away, and a recent investigation by NBC News found that in the vast majority of cases reviewed – 23 out of 25 – American Muslim passengers were singled out for illegal searches of their devices.4

A landmark unanimous 2014 Supreme Court case ruled that digital data searched at the border is different than physical property and should require a warrant, but CBP continues to conduct unconstitutional searches. Sen. Wyden’s bill would:

Require law enforcement to get a warrant based on probable cause before they can search a device of a U.S. person.
Prohibit officials from delaying or denying entry to the U.S. if a person declines to hand over passwords, PINs, and social media account information.
Require law enforcement to have probable cause before they can seize a device.5
Simply put, the Constitution applies at the U.S. border, and Sen. Wyden’s bill would put an end to CBP’s racist, illegal campaign to seize American citizens' private data. We must speak out now to ensure this critical legislation is passed as soon as possible.

Tell Congress: Pass the Protecting Data at the Border Act. Click the link below to sign the petition:

https://act.credoaction.com/sign/illegal_border_search?t=6&akid=22698.247355.VWbkxU

Thanks for all you do.

Josh Nelson, Deputy Political Director
CREDO Action from Working Assets (http://act.credoaction.com/go/109?t=7&akid=22698.247355.VWbkxU)

Add your name:

Sign the petition ► (https://act.credoaction.com/sign/illegal_border_search?t=8&akid=22698.247355.VWbkxU)


References

Brian Naylor, "U.S. Border Patrol Agents Step Up Cellphone Searches," National Public Radio, April 10, 2017.
Sen. Ron Wyden, "Wyden, Paul, Polis and Farenthold Bill Requires Warrants to Search Americans’ Digital Devices at the Border," April 4, 2017.
Esha Bhandari, Nathan Freed Wessler and Noa Yachot, “Can Border Agents Search Your Electronic Devices? It’s Complicated.” American Civil Liberties Union, March 14, 2017.
Cynthia McFadden, E.D. Cauchi, William M. Arkin and Kevin Monahan, "American Citizens: U.S. Border Agents Can Search Your Cellphone," NBC News, March 13, 2017.
Sen. Ron Wyden, "Summary of Protecting Data at the Border Act"


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