Targeting The Most Vulnerable: Children in Detention In The US and Palestine
By Alice Rothchild
July 03, 2018 "Information
Clearing House"
- When kids are brown
does anyone care?
Americans are grappling with the
incarceration of 10-year-olds and the
concept of “tender age detention centers”
while morally bankrupt politicians wring
their bloodied hands. As courts begin to
respond, many folks across the political
spectrum are wondering, “What happens to the
children caught in this catastrophe?”
Interestingly, there is much we can learn
from research in the US and from the Israeli
experience with regard to children and
prisons. The US and Israel both perceive
themselves as enlightened “western
democracies,” yet both have high
incarceration rates, particularly for
children of color, sometimes involving the
same global prison industries. In both
countries, these kinds of children are
perceived as the “other,” the “enemy,” the
“invading hordes ready to destroy America,”
the “Muslim terrorists seeking to kill
Israelis.” They are presented as less human
and less deserving than white and/or Jewish
children and less likely to evoke an
empathic reaction.
The New York Times reported that the
approximately quarter of a million children
with incarcerated single mothers in the US
are at risk for ending up in foster care,
and as with the recent children on the
US/Mexico border, they have the potential to
being lost. Stop a moment. Can you imagine
losing your own child to bureaucratic chaos
and mismanagement? The Dallas Morning News
noted, “No one in the criminal justice
system is responsible for the safety of
children whose mothers go to jail.” It seems
that misplacing children in the bureaucracy
of prisons and foster care is not a new
phenomenon.
Juvenile detention facilities in the US
currently hold more than 30,000 children.
The Sentencing Project reports that black
children are incarcerated at a rate five
times higher than white children. “More than
60 percent of child offenders are being held
for nonviolent offenses like drugs, theft or
even violations that only apply to minors.”
Some facilities are still guilty of
appalling conditions and practices such as
the use of violence, restraints, solitary
confinement, and the denial of education to
a minor.
Are You Tired Of The Lies And Non-Stop Propaganda? |
The approximately 400,000
children in the foster care system are often
prohibited from any contact with their
parents. Twelve percent of those live in
group homes or institutional settings.
The Times article concluded:
These children are typically taken by
officials they have never met, without
warning, then subjected to intrusive
interrogations, medical examinations and
sometimes strip searches.
Some three-quarters of cases nationwide
involve not abuse, but neglect, a “really
broad umbrella” that “often just looks like
poverty…There’s no consistent evidence that
removing kids is, on average, beneficial,
and there’s substantial evidence that it
does harm.”
Much has been written about the extensive
psychological and cognitive costs of
abruptly removing children from their
parents and placing them in prisons for
indeterminate amounts of time. There is also
significant trauma created by imprisoning
families with their children indefinitely
while basically the US justice system
figures out a way to deport them to the
dangers they fled, the gangs, rape, poverty,
and domestic abuse. Additionally, it appears
that the US government has no clear plan to
reunite the 2,300 children separated at the
border from their parents, including 400
children under the age of 12. Children are
likely haunted by the experience of being
abandoned and filled with self-doubt
regarding their own worth.
In The New Yorker, one ER physician working
in Colorado described what she was seeing as
“government-mandated child abuse.” These
children will be scarred for life because
our President has created a false, racist
narrative and incessant fear mongering
regarding the dangers of migrants and asylum
seekers. One could argue that this is a
cynical move to keep his base happy as
midterm elections loom ahead and as he plans
for a glorious re-election. Famously, the
President tweeted: “We cannot allow our
Country to be overrun by illegal immigrants
as the Democrats tell their phony stories of
sadness and grief.”
This level of depravity should be met with
universal condemnation by anyone with even a
shred of moral fiber or perhaps a Christian
understanding of our responsibilities
towards the weak, the powerless, and the
destitute. To have the Vice President
invoking his wrathful God to justify such
unconscionable policies would be shocking if
we were not already so inundated with the
daily shocks from the White House.
The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
states that children should not be deprived
of liberty unlawfully or arbitrarily and
that arrest, detention, or imprisonment
should only be used in extreme circumstances
for the shortest period of time. Ironically,
the US is the only country in the world that
has not signed the treaty as reported by the
ACLU.
But signing the treaty is clearly not
enough. According to Defense of Children
International-Palestine, last year an
average of 310 Palestinian children were
imprisoned for “security offenses” each
month, with 60 children 12 to 15 years of
age. An estimated 700 children are
prosecuted each year in military courts with
a 99+% conviction rate. The most common
charge is stone throwing which can result in
up to 20 years in prison. There have been
multiple reports of physical, sexual, and
verbal abuse during arrest and
interrogation, with 74.5% of children
reporting physical violence during arrest
and 62% reporting verbal abuse, intimidation
and humiliation. Solitary confinement during
interrogation has been documented, with an
average period of 12 days. The Israeli
military courts also put children in
administrative detention for months,
basically imprisoning them without charges
or trial.
To be absolutely clear on this, if a Jewish
Israeli child was caught throwing stones at
a PA security officer or a Palestinian
farmer harvesting his olives, he would not
end up in detention. Indeed, if he was from
certain Jewish settlements, he would be
celebrated as a hero. Such is the justice
under military occupation. Jewish children
live under civil law and of course are not
viewed as the enemy.
According to Addameer, since 2000, more than
12,000 Palestinian children have been
detained. The child’s sentence “is decided
on the basis of the child’s age at the time
of sentencing, and not at the time when the
alleged offense was committed.” Children are
arrested by Israeli security often in the
middle of the night by a large and
intimidating group of well-armed, helmeted
soldiers. Families cower in the darkness of
their homes while mothers and fathers scream
to keep their sons from being blindfolded,
handcuffed, and taken away. Targeting the
most vulnerable puts pressure on the entire
community to end any form of resistance. The
soldiers also seek to force the children to
become collaborators, to deter future
participation in demonstrations and stone
throwing, and to extort their families
financially with large fines. In high
conflict areas, there is a pattern of
indiscriminate arrests and detention with
little or no evidence except the testimony
of a soldier.
The arrests are highly dangerous and
traumatizing, leading to epidemics of bed
wetting, anxiety, depression, PTSD,
agitation, and dropping out of school.
Childhood trauma also increases the risk of
psychological and behavioral disorders in
adulthood. Psychologists in the
Rehabilitation Center for Victims of Torture
in Ramallah note that targeting adolescents
disrupts a critical point in character
formation and disturbs the bonds between a
child and his family and society. The arrest
also causes havoc with the educational
process as adolescents are often in the
final stages of secondary school, preparing
for exams and college.
While children from Mexico and Central and
South America have different experiences
from Palestinian children, they have much in
common. One group is suffering from gangs,
poverty, drugs, repression, and violent
societies while the other is suffering from
a brutal military occupation, recurrent IDF
incursions, soldier and settler violence,
home demolitions, and poverty. Under these
circumstances, taking dangerous desert
journeys at the hands of coyotes or heaving
a stone at a jeep spewing teargas is an
understandable response. Imprisoning either
group is a political and racialized decision
that creates deep and long-lasting trauma in
the children and their families.
While the outrage builds in the US, will
anyone pay attention to the fate of the
children in the West Bank and Gaza? Their
lives may depend on us.
This article was originally published by "Mondoweiss"
The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
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