Categories: U.S. and Canada

Protest at Immigrant Detention Center, then Fort Benning

Workers World is publishing the following announcement from the School of the Americas Watch on their upcoming protest action in Georgia.

On Saturday, Nov. 22, 2014, hundreds of human rights activists will converge in Georgia in the wake of President Obama’s announcement about his executive actions in regards to immigration. The activists will march 1.7 miles from Lumpkin, Ga., to the Stewart Detention Center, a private, for-profit, immigrant prison, where approximately 1,800 men await their deportation proceedings.

At a vigil in front of the prison, the activists will demand the release of the immigrants who are imprisoned at Stewart, an immediate end to mass deportations and the closure of the Stewart Detention Center. (tinyurl.com/kynk9ls)

“History is made by movements of people who organize themselves to struggle collectively for a better world,” said human rights activist and SOA Watch founder Father Roy Bourgeois. “To win social progress, we need people power in the streets. We will get what we are willing to fight for.”

Following the protest at the detention center, a caravan will drive to the main gates of Fort Benning, the military base that is home to the U.S. military training camp known as the School of the Americas — renamed the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation. (soaw.org/november)

The activists will call out the connection between U.S.-sponsored military repression in Latin America and forced migration.

SOA training is among the root causes of migration, that forces people to flee their countries in Latin America. Many immigrants to the United States are victims of U.S.-sponsored military training and atrocities in Latin America. In its fight to close the School of the Americas, SOA Watch continues to work towards a world that is free of suffering and violence.

SOA Watch considers deportation quotas, mandatory detention, for-profit immigration detention centers, the militarization of the border, the “War on Drugs” and the training of repressive forces at the SOA/WHINSEC, as all parts of the same racist system of violence and domination. A dismantling of these and other policies is needed for there ever to be true “comprehensive immigration reform.”

a guest author

Share
Published by
a guest author

Recent Posts

In honor of International Workers Day: Hamas calls for week of global solidarity

We call upon the workers of the world to a week of solidarity events with…

April 28, 2024

Student organizations in the Gaza Strip in solidarity with U.S. student Intifada

The following statement was posted on Samidoun Palestinian Political Prisoners Network on April 25, 2024. …

April 28, 2024

SUNY BDS movement stages march on Albany for Palestine

Albany, New York Around 200 students, faculty, and activists from a variety of State University…

April 28, 2024

Final Declaration of the Rome Forum: What Future for Palestine?

The Rome Forum crowned two days of intense work on April 20-21, 2024, with the…

April 28, 2024

German police shut down Palestine Congress in Berlin

By Andrew Johnson An anti-imperialist Palestine Congress “against German complicity in the genocide in Gaza”…

April 26, 2024

Taking protests from the streets to the sea

The following article first appeared on the Resistance News Network, April 22. In two days,…

April 26, 2024