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The Detroit Journalism Cooperative is an integrated community media network providing insight on the issues facing Detroit. It features two radio stations, an online magazine, five ethnic newspapers, and a public television station-- All working together to tell the story of Detroit.The DJC includes Michigan Radio, Bridge Magazine, Detroit Public Television, WDET, and New Michigan Media. To see all the stories produced for the DJC, visit The Intersection website.Scroll below to see DJC stories from Michigan Radio and other selected stories from our partners.

BRIDGE MAGAZINE: Detroit's Chaldean, Iraqi communities scramble to act following ICE detentions

Julia Kassem
Friends and family of the targeted individuals said that more than 100 were rounded up and deported.

On Monday, June 12, dozens gathered outside the Mother of God Chaldean Catholic Church in Southfield to protest a recent wave of ICE raids that targeted, captured and detained dozens of Iraqi Americans at multiple locations across Metro Detroit, including local churches, homes and even a hospital.

Shocked and outraged by the seizure of individuals from communities including Sterling Heights, Warren, Southfield, Oak Park and Dearborn, impacted family members rallied around the ICE detention facility in Detroit Sunday evening, where large white buses carrying the occupants were departing.

In protest, family and protesters blocked a bus in an attempt to halt its transport to another detention facility.

Most of those taken into custody over the weekend are to be transported to the Northeast Ohio Correctional Center in Youngstown, Ohio before their deportation.

In the context of the current genocide, the Geneva Convention against Torture deems it unlawful to send persecuted individuals back to endangerment.

Friends and family of the targeted individuals said that more than 100 were rounded up and deported. Sources say around 160 names have been compiled amongst non-profits and the ACLU.

Cal of Southfield, Michigan is one of many Iraqi American Chaldeans who has called the U.S. home for nearly 40 years. Having served time for a 1993 armed robbery, he was released in 1999 and since has been a law-abiding member of society.

Many of his friends and associates, with past records as minor as marijuana possession, were part of those picked up by ICE over the weekend.

“I would be on one of those buses too,” he said. “If I didn’t run to an attorney to reopen my case.”

In a written statement to The Arab American News, ICE spokesman Khaalid Walls said that the selected were deemed eligible for removal under U.S. law.

“As part of ICE’s efforts to process the backlog of these individuals, the agency recently arrested a number of Iraqi nationals, all of whom had criminal convictions for crimes including homicide, rape, aggravated assault, kidnapping, burglary, drug trafficking, robbery, sex assault, weapons violations and other offenses,” he said.

The sweep follows the Iraq and Syria Genocide Emergency Relief and Accountability Act passed by Congress on June 6. The legislation called for the provision of emergency aid to the victims of genocide by ISIS against ethnic minorities, which include Christians, Yazidis, Assyrians and Shi’a Muslims, the latter of which comprise a majority of Iraqis and are deemed heretics by ISIS.

Cal said that in the context of the current genocide, the Geneva convention against torture deems it unlawful to send persecuted individuals back to endangerment.

“You cannot send them to their death,” he said, adding that many of the friends and family of those detained are sure their loved ones will meet that fate if sent to Iraq.

Affected individuals are encouraged to get an attorney who’ll file a motion under the Convention Against Torture (CAT), with the threat of persecution evidenced by the Congressional bill that recognized violence against these groups.

Salem Jiddou, principal engineer of a contracting firm, was among those in attendance at Monday’s rally.

“They were punished, they served their term in jail… and whatever fine was imposed upon them,” he said about the detainees. “Now, after 20 years of being good citizens, we are sending them to Iraq to die. What human rights is that?”

Possibly a national trend

The deportations follow recent negotiations between the Iraqi government and the Trump administration to remove a certain number of Americans of Iraqi origin from the country.

Sources say that the exchanges are part of an agreement to ease Iraq off of the U.S.’s travel ban.

“Reading between the lines,” says attorney George Mann, “orders from Washington [targeted] convicted criminals. But most of these people have been here for a long time, and have their whole families here.”

The lawyer said that while some have met terms for orders of removal, which the lawyer recognizes as an often arbitrary and “blanket” designation, administrations prior have not prioritized forcibly deporting these individuals.

“Trump has never hidden his attitudes towards immigrants and people here illegally,” Mann explained, noting that the administration “looks at people with orders of deportation as criminals.”

While Trump received support from the Chaldean American community, his campaign promises to protect and prioritize Christian immigrants and refugees from the Middle East were quickly eclipsed by his execution of his scrutinizing immigration and deportation policies.

A statement released by Emgage Tuesday called for immigration reform in the wake of the raids.

The Trump administration "looks at people with orders of deportation as criminals." - George Mann

“It is imperative that local law enforcement be allowed the right to refuse to honor ICE’s detainer requests to maintain a level of trust between law enforcement and residents. Immigrants contribute heavily to our society, and have an enormous impact on our economy. Immigration reform is needed, and the separating of families must come to an end,” said Emgage Executive Director Hassan Sheikh.

“Each [deportation] will be hurting at least 100 people because Chaldeans are family oriented people,” Jiddou said. “They served their terms, they are paying their taxes and some of them are very successful business people.”

Not all of those rounded up Sunday were of Chaldean or Christian origin.

One Muslim woman, a cosmetologist who volunteers at a Livonia food bank, vehemently demanded that justice be met for her family and community after her brother was taken by ICE agents Sunday.

“They said he’d be back in two hours. Where is he?” she asked. “We are volunteers; we work here; we pay our taxes and we pay our dues…we were adopted into this country only to be targeted.”

Immigrants rights groups from Detroit to Ann Arbor also joined Monday’s rally to share information and offer support.

Representatives from the Ann Arbor/Ypsilanti Rapid Response team showed up to distribute information and instruct residents to not comply with certain ICE demands out of intimidation.

“In response to all questions, say, ‘I don’t want to talk to you without a lawyer,’” a representative from the group advised the crowd.

They additionally advised the families and friends of those detained to not have their loved ones sign anything while in custody, which they warned would “sign away their rights.”

However, attorneys and groups say that these individuals are being moved and held before they can they can organize or recieve help.

“You wait in jail until the judge grants you a bond,” Mann explained, recalling that recent cases involved individuals facing arrest before cases forward over to judges for bond hearings.

“Either a judge in Ohio will have to decide the bond or we would have to go represent [them] there or telephonically over a crucial bond hearing” he said.

Help and legal advice can be found at Chaldean American community centers across Metro-Detroit, including the Chaldean Community Foundation at (586) 722-7253.

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