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Mississippi's local WJTV reported following the ICE raids that "many children of those arrested across the state are now left homeless with nowhere to go." (Photo: Alex Love/WJTV)
Heartbreaking images and videos of weeping children and loved ones spread rapidly on social media Wednesday night after Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested nearly 700 workers at several Mississippi food processing plants in a series of coordinated raids that were described as "the largest single-state workplace enforcement action in U.S. history."
"Days after the El Paso massacre where a gun wielding maniac parroted Trump's anti-immigrant hate, a battalion of ICE agents abducted 680 Latinx and immigrant men and women on Trump's orders."
--Greisa Martinez Rosas, United We Dream
Mississippi's local WJTV reported following the ICE raids that "many children of those arrested across the state are now left homeless with nowhere to go."
"These children," WJTV reported, "were relying on neighbors and even strangers to pick them up outside their homes after school and drive them to a community fitness center where people tried to keep them calm. But many kids could not stop crying for mom and dad."
Among those appearing on local television news cameras was 11-year-old Magdalena Gomez Gregorio, who pleaded that her father, among those missing after the raids, to be returned to her.
"My dad is not a criminal," Gregorio said through tears. Watch:
As ProPublica reporter Dara Lind pointed out on Twitter, young children of immigrants have lived in constant fear of their parents being swept up at any moment by President Donald Trump's deportation force.
"I've spoken to school employees in cities where there were no raids," noted Lind, "saying that sometimes kids came in midday asking to call and see if parents were still home."
In total, ICE agents carried out raids in six Mississippi cities, leaving outrage and despair in their wake. According to local news reports, workers suspected of being undocumented were rounded up, placed on buses, and sent to an ICE facility in Louisiana.
"Children finished their first day of school with no parents to go home to tonight," reported the Jackson Free Press. "Babies and toddlers remained at daycare with no guardian to pick them up. A child vainly searched a workplace parking lot for missing parents."
Buzzfeed reported the story of a woman named Dianne, whose fiance was arrested in one of the raids on Wednesday.
On Wednesday morning, Dianne received an alarming call. It was her fiance, dialing her from the chicken processing plant in a nearby central Mississippi town where he worked long shifts deboning meat.
"ICE is here!" he yelled. In the background, Dianne could hear other laborers terrified. The panic was palpable. One worker called out in Spanish, "Ayudame! [Help me!]"
Dianne's fiance, who came to the country more than two decades ago from Mexico without authorization, told her he had no way out and would not be able to escape immigration enforcement agents. His voice trembling, he told Dianne that she needed to make a promise before he got off the line: "Take care of my kids."
In a statement Wednesday, Jackson, Mississippi Mayor Chokwe Lumumba condemned the raids as "dehumanizing."
"I'm calling upon faith institutions in our community to become sanctuaries for our immigrant neighbors and protect them from potential harm," Lumumba said. "The City of Jackson strongly objects to the Trump administration's ICE raids."
Greisa Martinez Rosas, deputy executive director of rights group United We Dream, called the massive raids "an act of terrorism" against immigrant communities and said the "effect of ripping children from their parents at the border or stealing parents away from their children in Mississippi is the same."
"Just days after the El Paso massacre where a gun wielding maniac parroted Trump's anti-immigrant hate, a battalion of ICE agents abducted 680 Latinx and immigrant men and women on Trump's orders," tweeted Rosas. "For anyone who tries to desensitize the situation or blur the connections between the acts of terror this week I call bullshit. Latinx and immigrant kids and families have been terrorized this week."
"It is time for both parties in Congress to stop giving ICE and [Customs and Border Protection] billions of dollars and to hold them accountable," Rosas said. "ICE and CBP are the armed, taxpayer funded extension of Trump's anti-immigrant hate and must be stopped."
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
Heartbreaking images and videos of weeping children and loved ones spread rapidly on social media Wednesday night after Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested nearly 700 workers at several Mississippi food processing plants in a series of coordinated raids that were described as "the largest single-state workplace enforcement action in U.S. history."
"Days after the El Paso massacre where a gun wielding maniac parroted Trump's anti-immigrant hate, a battalion of ICE agents abducted 680 Latinx and immigrant men and women on Trump's orders."
--Greisa Martinez Rosas, United We Dream
Mississippi's local WJTV reported following the ICE raids that "many children of those arrested across the state are now left homeless with nowhere to go."
"These children," WJTV reported, "were relying on neighbors and even strangers to pick them up outside their homes after school and drive them to a community fitness center where people tried to keep them calm. But many kids could not stop crying for mom and dad."
Among those appearing on local television news cameras was 11-year-old Magdalena Gomez Gregorio, who pleaded that her father, among those missing after the raids, to be returned to her.
"My dad is not a criminal," Gregorio said through tears. Watch:
As ProPublica reporter Dara Lind pointed out on Twitter, young children of immigrants have lived in constant fear of their parents being swept up at any moment by President Donald Trump's deportation force.
"I've spoken to school employees in cities where there were no raids," noted Lind, "saying that sometimes kids came in midday asking to call and see if parents were still home."
In total, ICE agents carried out raids in six Mississippi cities, leaving outrage and despair in their wake. According to local news reports, workers suspected of being undocumented were rounded up, placed on buses, and sent to an ICE facility in Louisiana.
"Children finished their first day of school with no parents to go home to tonight," reported the Jackson Free Press. "Babies and toddlers remained at daycare with no guardian to pick them up. A child vainly searched a workplace parking lot for missing parents."
Buzzfeed reported the story of a woman named Dianne, whose fiance was arrested in one of the raids on Wednesday.
On Wednesday morning, Dianne received an alarming call. It was her fiance, dialing her from the chicken processing plant in a nearby central Mississippi town where he worked long shifts deboning meat.
"ICE is here!" he yelled. In the background, Dianne could hear other laborers terrified. The panic was palpable. One worker called out in Spanish, "Ayudame! [Help me!]"
Dianne's fiance, who came to the country more than two decades ago from Mexico without authorization, told her he had no way out and would not be able to escape immigration enforcement agents. His voice trembling, he told Dianne that she needed to make a promise before he got off the line: "Take care of my kids."
In a statement Wednesday, Jackson, Mississippi Mayor Chokwe Lumumba condemned the raids as "dehumanizing."
"I'm calling upon faith institutions in our community to become sanctuaries for our immigrant neighbors and protect them from potential harm," Lumumba said. "The City of Jackson strongly objects to the Trump administration's ICE raids."
Greisa Martinez Rosas, deputy executive director of rights group United We Dream, called the massive raids "an act of terrorism" against immigrant communities and said the "effect of ripping children from their parents at the border or stealing parents away from their children in Mississippi is the same."
"Just days after the El Paso massacre where a gun wielding maniac parroted Trump's anti-immigrant hate, a battalion of ICE agents abducted 680 Latinx and immigrant men and women on Trump's orders," tweeted Rosas. "For anyone who tries to desensitize the situation or blur the connections between the acts of terror this week I call bullshit. Latinx and immigrant kids and families have been terrorized this week."
"It is time for both parties in Congress to stop giving ICE and [Customs and Border Protection] billions of dollars and to hold them accountable," Rosas said. "ICE and CBP are the armed, taxpayer funded extension of Trump's anti-immigrant hate and must be stopped."
Heartbreaking images and videos of weeping children and loved ones spread rapidly on social media Wednesday night after Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested nearly 700 workers at several Mississippi food processing plants in a series of coordinated raids that were described as "the largest single-state workplace enforcement action in U.S. history."
"Days after the El Paso massacre where a gun wielding maniac parroted Trump's anti-immigrant hate, a battalion of ICE agents abducted 680 Latinx and immigrant men and women on Trump's orders."
--Greisa Martinez Rosas, United We Dream
Mississippi's local WJTV reported following the ICE raids that "many children of those arrested across the state are now left homeless with nowhere to go."
"These children," WJTV reported, "were relying on neighbors and even strangers to pick them up outside their homes after school and drive them to a community fitness center where people tried to keep them calm. But many kids could not stop crying for mom and dad."
Among those appearing on local television news cameras was 11-year-old Magdalena Gomez Gregorio, who pleaded that her father, among those missing after the raids, to be returned to her.
"My dad is not a criminal," Gregorio said through tears. Watch:
As ProPublica reporter Dara Lind pointed out on Twitter, young children of immigrants have lived in constant fear of their parents being swept up at any moment by President Donald Trump's deportation force.
"I've spoken to school employees in cities where there were no raids," noted Lind, "saying that sometimes kids came in midday asking to call and see if parents were still home."
In total, ICE agents carried out raids in six Mississippi cities, leaving outrage and despair in their wake. According to local news reports, workers suspected of being undocumented were rounded up, placed on buses, and sent to an ICE facility in Louisiana.
"Children finished their first day of school with no parents to go home to tonight," reported the Jackson Free Press. "Babies and toddlers remained at daycare with no guardian to pick them up. A child vainly searched a workplace parking lot for missing parents."
Buzzfeed reported the story of a woman named Dianne, whose fiance was arrested in one of the raids on Wednesday.
On Wednesday morning, Dianne received an alarming call. It was her fiance, dialing her from the chicken processing plant in a nearby central Mississippi town where he worked long shifts deboning meat.
"ICE is here!" he yelled. In the background, Dianne could hear other laborers terrified. The panic was palpable. One worker called out in Spanish, "Ayudame! [Help me!]"
Dianne's fiance, who came to the country more than two decades ago from Mexico without authorization, told her he had no way out and would not be able to escape immigration enforcement agents. His voice trembling, he told Dianne that she needed to make a promise before he got off the line: "Take care of my kids."
In a statement Wednesday, Jackson, Mississippi Mayor Chokwe Lumumba condemned the raids as "dehumanizing."
"I'm calling upon faith institutions in our community to become sanctuaries for our immigrant neighbors and protect them from potential harm," Lumumba said. "The City of Jackson strongly objects to the Trump administration's ICE raids."
Greisa Martinez Rosas, deputy executive director of rights group United We Dream, called the massive raids "an act of terrorism" against immigrant communities and said the "effect of ripping children from their parents at the border or stealing parents away from their children in Mississippi is the same."
"Just days after the El Paso massacre where a gun wielding maniac parroted Trump's anti-immigrant hate, a battalion of ICE agents abducted 680 Latinx and immigrant men and women on Trump's orders," tweeted Rosas. "For anyone who tries to desensitize the situation or blur the connections between the acts of terror this week I call bullshit. Latinx and immigrant kids and families have been terrorized this week."
"It is time for both parties in Congress to stop giving ICE and [Customs and Border Protection] billions of dollars and to hold them accountable," Rosas said. "ICE and CBP are the armed, taxpayer funded extension of Trump's anti-immigrant hate and must be stopped."