Trapped Behind Razor Wire: Inside The Cruel Heart Of Trump’s Deportation Machine | World News

Miami, Florida: Marie Ange Blaise was breathing for the weather when the women around her began to scream. The 44 -year -old woman collapsed in the Broward Transition Center. One of the prisoners hit the cell gate and begged for help. But no one has come for more than 30 minutes.
“We were screaming and shouting. He didn’t move,” the witness said to the researchers later.
When a medical team arrived, Blaise had lost consciousness. He died soon.
His story is one of the many people in a new human rights investigation that reveals widespread abuse in Miami, Florida or in the three immigration detention centers nearby.
The report, published by the Human Rights Monitoring Organization on Monday with the immigrant justice and the sanctuary of Güney, offers a creepy look at the lives of people detained in the Krome North Service Processing Center, Broward Transition Center and the Federal Detention Center.
Maksym was begged for a doctor for a doctor. 44 -year -old Ukrainian citizen, chest pain, fever and vomiting in the chrome facility. He was ignored for days. When he finally collapsed, the guards accused him of using drugs. His cell friend Carlos said the claim was a lie.
Shortly after it was taken to a stretcher, it was declared that the brain died. He never gained consciousness.
Based on the negotiations with detainees, families, lawyers and even government records, the report accuses US officials of systematic negligence, inhuman treatment and medical indifference – failures that may have contributed to more than one death.
‘He was treated less than human’
The 92 -page report draws a disturbing immigrant detention portrait under the Donald Trump administration and emphasizes how the rejection of overcrowded, sexy abuse and basic care is normalized in facilities extending beyond the limits.
Human Rights Monitoring Organization Crisis and Conflict Director Belkis Wille said in a statement that accompanies the report, “Migration detention people are treated less than human beings. These are not isolated events,” he said.
The prisoners announced that he rejected the drug, was punished for looking for mental health and that he was locked under border imprisonment because he spoke.
Only a woman organized at the male chrome facility, said that access to shower for days, and that male prisoners were forced to use an open toilet in full appearance.
“If men stood in a chair, they could see it towards our room. We begged to shower, but they told us that it was not possible because it was a male facility,” he said.
Others described extreme crowds, packaged in areas designed for six 30 to 40 people. The beds were small and many of them slept on the ground. Soap, sanitary products and even drinking water took short. At one point, the prisoners were told to relax themselves in a bucket.
After a routine appointment, a British businessman Harpinder Chauhan, who was arrested by the United States Immigration and Customs Protection (ICE), remembered that he was threatened when he wanted a toilet that had repeatedly washed.
Chauhan said, “They said they’d create a problem we wouldn’t like if we continue to ask us,” Chauhan said.
‘Crocodile Alcatraz’ – Trump Order Machine
The investigation attributes these abuse, a mass deactivation strategy, a wider policy shift within the scope of President Trump, who has left the detention centers under water without providing adequate surveillance or resources.
While the government was engaged in increasing numbers, the government returned to quickly built detention projects, including a Florida state, nicknamed Crocodile Alcatraz ‘.
The federal data specified in the report show that the number of prisoners rising from 39,000 shortly after Trump took office in January increased to approximately 57,000 by July.
Last week, Wall Street Journal reported that the management was trying to scal the custody bed of up to 100,000 and quickly scale new facilities on military bases and ice properties.
Earlier this year, Trump’s 2025 budget contains unprecedented $ 45 billion that is unseen allocated to new detention centers.
One of the joint writers of the report said, “These deaths and abuses are not an accident. It is a direct result of a government that deals with immigration as a war area and a spent to prisoners,” he said.
Legal and moral violations
According to legal analysts, the conditions detailed in the report violate both US federal standards and international law. The immigrant detention in the United States had to be administrative, not punishing. Most prisoners are waiting for the court or serve criminal penalties.
Nevertheless, the findings show that many are based on worse treatment than prisons.
Medical negligence, gender -based ill -treatment, excessive use of force and lack of sanitation are among the most documented violations.
The report also emphasizes that most of the Buz’s detention network contract with very few federal surveillance to private companies and local authorities.
The authors called for a complete investigation, the immediate release of vulnerable prisoners and to stop Florida and more detainees throughout the country.
As for the families of Marie Ange Blaise and Maksym Chernyak, there are never questions that cannot be answered, and they don’t care about the pain of knowing that their loved ones die in places designed to keep them unlimited.
