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Families report Iraqi detainees on hunger strike

Todd McInturf
/
Detroit News

LANSING, MI (MPRN)--   Some Iraqi immigrants who are being detained while they fight deportation have gone on a hunger strike.

It’s not clear how many detainees are refusing to eat. Family members and the ACLU say it might be as many as 50. US Immigration and Customs Enforcement says seven detainees have been placed on medical watch after going without eating for 72 hours.

Many of the detainees are from metro Detroit and are being held at a federal facility in Youngstown, Ohio.

Ashourina Slewo’s father is being held at the facility. She says the detainees want to be released to their families while their cases are argued.

“They just want to fight their cases from their homes, from out here,” she says. “There’s such a financial burden on the families out here because they are there. If they were out here, they could work, they could provide for their families, they could pay for their lawyers themselves, but right now, what we’re stuck with, it’s a bit much, honestly.”

The federal government is seeking to deport the detainees because they have criminal convictions in their past. 

Several hundred of the detainees have filed a class action lawsuit in Detroit to fight the deportations.