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Wednesday, 8 April 2020
'I won't survive': Iranian scientist in US detention says Ice will let Covid-19 kill many
'I won't survive': Iranian scientist in US detention says Ice will let Covid-19 kill many
Although he was exonerated, Dr Sirous Asgari remains locked up and
tells the Guardian ‘inhumane’ jail is denying detainees masks and hand
sanitizer
n Iranian scientist who was exonerated in a US sanctions trial but
remains jailed by immigration authorities said the conditions in
detention were filthy and overcrowded – and officials were doing little
to prevent a deadly coronavirus outbreak.
Dr Sirous Asgari, a materials science and engineering professor, was acquitted
in November on federal charges of stealing trade secrets related to his
academic work with a university in Ohio. Although the US government
lost its case on all charges, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice)
has kept him indefinitely detained since the trial. Now he’s speaking
out about the “inhumane” treatment that could cost him his life.
Asgari, 59, told the Guardian that his Ice holding facility in
Alexandria, Louisiana, had no basic cleaning practices in place and
continued to bring in new detainees from across the country with no
strategy to minimize the threat of Covid-19.
In a phone call from the Alexandria Staging Facility (ASF), he said
he believed the only safe option would be to shut down the facility due
to the deplorable conditions. ASF is a 400-bed site where people are
supposed to be detained for no more than 72 hours, typically a final
stop before they are deported. But with Covid-19 travel restrictions and
flight cancellations, Ice has been holding people for days on end in
cramped bunkbeds alongside new arrivals who may have been exposed to the
virus.
Asgari arrived at ASF on 10 March and has been seeking to voluntarily “self deport” to Iran. Ice has refused to let him fly home or be temporarily released with his family in the US. He alleged:
Detainees have no hand sanitizer, and the facility is not
regularly cleaning bathrooms or sleeping areas. Asgari and a few other
detainees have devised a schedule to try to clean surfaces themselves
with the minimal soap available.
Detainees lack access to masks. For two weeks, ASF also refused
to let Asgari wear his own protective mask, which he brought with him to
the facility, and it has refused to supply one, despite his history of
serious respiratory problems.
Detainees struggle to stay clean, and the facility has an awful
stench. Because the facility is supposed to be temporary, there is no
laundry available and detainees are stuck with the clothes they were
wearing upon arrival, sometimes after long journeys.
There are no physical distancing guidelines at the facility. It
appears no procedures or practices have changed in response to Covid-19
since Asgari’s arrival, even as Louisiana state and federal officials
have urged people to isolate.
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“The
way Ice looks at these people is not like they are human beings, but
are objects to get rid of,” said Asgari, a professor at the Sharif
University of Technology, a public university in Tehran. “The way that
they have been treating us is absolutely terrifying. I don’t think many
people in the US know what is happening inside this black box.”
The situation is particularly worrying for Asgari, who is at risk of
getting pneumonia if an infection like Covid-19 reaches his lungs. Given
the conditions at ASF and treatment of detainees, if he were to get
coronavirus there, “I don’t think I would survive,” he said.
Advocates said Asgari’s case was especially troubling given that
there was no legal justification or logic to his continued detention. He
arrived in the US in 2017 with his wife and with valid passports and
visas but upon arrival discovered he was being prosecuted by the US
government for alleged violations of sanctions law.
Asgari, a father of three, has deep ties to the US. He completed his
materials engineering PhD at Drexel University in Pennsylvania, and two
of his children live in the US. But the FBI surveilled him and
ultimately he was charged with fraud and trade secret theft relating to
his work with a university in Ohio.
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During
a long trial, Asgari won his case and was acquitted in November 2019,
with a judge ruling the government’s evidence was insufficient. But
because the US had revoked his original visa, he was then taken into Ice
custody and has remained imprisoned since. He has asked Ice to let him
buy his own ticket back to Iran, but he has not been able to go before
an immigration judge and has not been granted bond to at least wait in
the US with his daughter.
“It is so egregious. He didn’t do anything wrong,” said Mehrnoush
Yazdanyar, an attorney and sanctions law expert who is helping Asgari’s
family and facilitated the Guardian’s interview behind bars. “This is
someone who is being unlawfully detained. Now if he gets corona, his
chances of survival are slim to none.”
The stakes of his case escalated dramatically after he was taken to
ASF on 10 March, just as the coronavirus was officially declared a
global pandemic. The professor said the conditions at the facility were
unbearable for long-term stays. New detainees are brought in at all
hours, meaning it’s impossible to get sleep in his pod, where there can
be up to 100 people in bunk beds in a single room. He puts toilet paper
in his ears but has struggled to get any rest and now has a sleep
disorder.
Asgari said there was not enough food. There is only one hot meal at
5pm and two smaller meals at breakfast and lunch, and no way to purchase
any other food. There are six showers for his pod, and people have a
hard time getting clean and can’t access clean clothes.
In
other detention centers and jails, detainees often have official paid
jobs and shifts cleaning the facilities. But at ASF, Asgari said, there
was no system in place: “They say cleaning is everybody’s responsibility
… They do sanitization once in a while.”He said he had been trying to encourage others to help him
clean on a schedule, and that sometimes they have Clorox in the
bathroom, but that other times they have had to just use the foam soap
from the showers.
One of his biggest concerns, however, is that so many people continue
to be brought in and mixed with the detainees already there, violating
the most basic standards of social distancing. “They are downplaying it
in this facility, that it is safe … But the circulation of people under
this coronavirus outbreak is absolutely nonsense … Coronavirus is a
viral bomb waiting to blow up here.”
For reasons that are unclear, Ice transferred Asgari from ASF on
Monday, took him out of state, then brought him back to the Louisiana
facility two days later. When he returned, ASF finally let him use his
own mask for the first time, Yazdanyar said.
An Ice spokesman did not respond to specific questions about Asgari’s
case or allegations but said in an email that no one in custody in
Louisiana had tested positive for Covid-19 and that detainees were
“provided appropriate soap and cleaning supplies”.
He said Ice was conducting
testing at Ice facilities and providing personal protective equipment
in accordance with US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) guidelines, and
that all individuals were screened upon arrival.
Asgari said he was doing his best to help fellow detainees when he could: “I’m trying to comfort others.”
If Ice officials were forced to spend a few nights trying to sleep at
the facility, “they would understand what an inhumane situation they
have created,” he added.
ASF must close to save lives, he said: “Instead of shutting down,
they are doing business as usual … The process is overruling human
rights ”
Asgari said he struggled to comprehend the fact that he remained
incarcerated months after his trial ended. “I am deeply hurt by the way I
have been treated after I have been exonerated. Ice does not care about
justice. Ice does not care about the constitution.”