Group of Haitian migrants sue Biden administration over poor treatment
The Haitian Bridge Alliance (HBA) had filed a class-action lawsuit against the Biden administration alleging the abuse of asylum-seeking Haitians, whose rights it said had been violated when they were removed from a makeshift camp in Texas in October.
The HBA also claims that the Department of Homeland Security violated the rights of thousands of Haitian asylum seekers after they fled the French-speaking Caribbean country because of the danger and insecurity there.
According to the HBA, the Haitians on arrival in the U.S. joined at least 15,000 Haitian asylum seekers in a makeshift U.S. Customs and Border Protection encampment in Del Rio, Texas. Still, they suffered from hunger and dehydration due to encampment conditions.
The asylum seekers said they “sweltered in triple-digit temperatures” by day and “slept on the ground” at night.
The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, included a statement from one of the plaintiffs, Mirard Joseph, who said he was “lashed at” by a Border Patrol agent on horseback.
Joseph’s experience was documented in a photo that was the subject of much criticism, including from President Biden.
The lawsuit accuses explicitly the Biden administration of failing to prepare for the influx of migrants despite being aware of the immigrants’ imminent arrival. It also says that the government was responsible for physical and verbal abuse of the migrants and failure to provide due process because of COVID-19 policies, including Title 42, which allows for the expulsion of people for public health reasons.
Apart from the HBA, several immigrant advocacy groups, including Justice Action Center and Innovation Law Lab, represent the 11 Haitian asylum seekers named in the case.
In the pending lawsuit, the HBA seeks injunctive and declaratory relief. The HBA further aims “to ensure accountability and an end to the Biden Administration’s harmful, discriminatory, and unlawful policies.”
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