‘It’s Frightening.’ Quarantined ICE Detainees In El Paso Share Their Stories.

ICE says that it has implemented protocols to separate detainees who test positive for COVID-19 in its facilities from others being held there.

By Angela KochergaApril 28, 2020 7:05 am, , , ,

From El Paso Matters:

Note: This post includes information from two El Paso Matters stories. The story linked above includes the most up-to-date information about the ICE response to questions about COVID-19 infections in its El Paso facility.

Women held by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in El Paso are expressing growing concern after several detainees tested positive for COVID-19. ICE has confirmed five positive cases, but the number of people exposed to the virus is much higher, according to women inside the facility.

“It’s frightening” is how one of the women described the situation after learning a person they were in contact with daily has tested positive for COVID-19.

She and another woman reached out to express their concerns after they were placed in quarantine. They don’t want their names or other identifying details used because they fear punishment from ICE, including having their phone privileges revoked.

“We all were together in the cafeteria, side by side eating with her, and others all bunched up,” the first woman said.

“We mingled with the first girl who on the 16th was detected with COVID-19 and tested positive,” the second woman said.

Quarantined in a tent

These women say they are among 17 detainees now quarantined in a tent at ICE’s El Paso Service Processing Center.

“Thank God none of us have symptoms,” the first woman said.

But behind a partition in the tent are other women who they suspect are sick with COVID-19.

“There are 12 people who are wearing face masks,” the first woman said. That includes the first woman who tested positive on April 16.

“The rest of the 11 must already be sick if she’s in there with them,” said the first woman.

“They’re all mixed together,” said the other woman.

The women who are in quarantine in the El Paso processing center said they’ve asked for information from the staff at the detention center about what is happening but don’t get answers. They also complain they do not have enough soap and the “chemical” used to wash their clothes is causing rashes. They are not allowed outside to exercise because they are in quarantine, they said.

The beds in the tent have been spaced apart to help with social distancing, but the women say precautions were only taken after some of the detainees became visibly sick.

“That’s when they began to separate us,” the first woman said.

ICE’s response to questions about COVID-19 cases in its facilities

ICE has set up protocols that include separating detainees in the El Paso Processing Center and other detention facilities where there are cases of COVID-19.

ICE outlined its procedures in a statement in response to questions about COVID-19 cases inside the El Paso facility amid growing concerns about an outbreak.

ICE places detainees with fever and/or respiratory symptoms in a single medical housing room, or in a medical airborne infection isolation room specifically designed to contain biological agents, such as COVID-19,” according to the statement.

The agency also said it also takes precautions to separate others who may have been exposed to the virus while in custody. “Detainees who meet CDC criteria for epidemiologic risk of exposure to COVID-19 are housed separately from the general population.”

ICE lists five cases of COVID-19 El Paso processing center as of Friday.  Women inside the facility reached out to voice their concerns after learning they had been in close contact with someone who tested positive.

The agency also has said 32 employees at detention centers have tested positive for COVID-19, but none in the El Paso area. That count appears to include only people who work directly for ICE and excludes contract employees. ICE told Sen. Tom Udall, a New Mexico Democrat, that a worker at Otero – where most of the staff are contractors – tested positive for COVID-19, but ICE has never publicly acknowledged that.

El Paso public health officials don’t seem to be tracking whether any workers at the ICE facility on Montana Avenue have tested positive for COVID-19 and are at risk for spreading the disease in the community.

Read more. 

El Paso Matters CEO Robert Moore contributed to this story.

 

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