
(WBEZ/Chip Mitchell)
Stephanie
Camba, right, and six other unauthorized immigrants on Tuesday block a
street near a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center
in Broadview, a suburb of Chicago.
Police sawed through plastic pipes to pry apart seven protesters at an immigration detention center near Chicago on Tuesday.
The
protesters, all in the United States without legal permission, demanded
a halt to deportations as Congress considers allowing most of the
country’s 11 million unauthorized immigrants to apply for legal status.
President
Barack Obama’s administration has increased deportations to roughly
1,100 a day, a record pace. Removals have continued as the Senate
Judiciary Committee works on a sweeping immigration bill drafted by a
bipartisan group that includes Dick Durbin (D-Illinois).
The
protesters, backed by about 100 supporters, held each other using chains
and locks inside three-foot segments of the polyvinyl chloride tubes — a
civil-disobedience setup they called a “lockbox.” The protesters sat
down in a street to block vehicles from the center, a U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement facility in suburban Broadview.
ICE holds
immigrants awaiting deportation in the center before loading them into
vans and buses that carry them to flights from Chicago’s O’Hare
International Airport.
The protesters called on Durbin to push Obama to suspend the removals.
“We’ve
had over a million families separated because of deportations,” said
Stephanie Camba, 22, a Filipina who said her parents brought her to the
United States when she was 11 years old. “This bill is not enough if
it’s not going to stop deportations. It should be deportations being
stopped first.”
A statement from Durbin’s office in response to
the protest says the senator was “instrumental in pushing the
administration” to allow many young unauthorized immigrants to apply for
work papers and a deportation reprieve under Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals, an Obama policy initiated last year.
Durbin,
the statement adds, is also working on the immigration bill as a member
of the Senate panel. “The hope is that next month, the full Senate will
begin debate on this common-sense, compromise proposal that will provide
millions of immigrants with an accountable path to citizenship,” the
statement says.
After officers cut through the tubing, Broadview
police arrested the protesters, charged them with disorderly conduct and
released them.
Chip Mitchell is WBEZ’s West Side bureau reporter. Follow him on Twitter @ChipMitchell1 and @WBEZoutloud, and connect with him through Facebook and LinkedIn.