RHONDOR DOWLAT and
ANNA LISA PAUL
Senior Reporters
rhondor.dowlat@guardian.co.tt
anna-lisa.paul@ guardian.co.tt
For the past 16 days, Miriannys Hernandez has remained without medication for a common flu she contracted shortly after being detained at the Heliport in Chaguaramas.
Hernandez was one of the first three migrants to be released on Monday night. However, she and the others were only allowed to leave at sunrise yesterday.
Up to late yesterday, of the 143 migrants detained, eight of them have so far been released—five women and three men.
Speaking through an interpreter with Guardian Media yesterday after her release, Hernandez, who did not want to be photographed, said she rushed home to be reunited with her two children, whom she had left in the care of her 16-year-old niece.
She said, “It was hard for my niece, but my friends and neighbours either gave her food to cook for her and the children or gave her cooked food.
“I was one among so many people that were detained in St James on July 9. I was one of those who got a fever, a terrible flu and I still have not recovered from the loss of my voice due to the flu. I’m better now that I’m out because I can get meds.”
Hernandez added, “Our family and friends took medicines for us while we were in there but many of us did not get it as it was confiscated. They only gave us meds when they felt to. Mind you, these are the meds brought to the Heliport by our friends. They wouldn’t give us the meds when requested and that is just the common cold meds,” she claimed.
“There were no doctors, medics, nurses that came to attend to us since July 9. Upon entering the Heliport we only got a COVID test.”
Speaking on behalf of the woman who suffered a miscarriage while in detention last week, Hernandez claimed she was also not given proper medical attention.
“While that was happening we asked for help an officer mocked us and laughed very shamelessly, the lack of attention for the older ladies who are there, some with high blood pressure, low blood pressure, was terrible,” she further claimed.
She, however, noted that there were officers who were kind and cooperated with them, but expressed disgust by the way they were treated by certain officials from the Venezuelan Embassy.
On Tuesday morning, members of the T&T Coast Guard were a bit concerned at Guardian Media’s presence in the vicinity of the Heliport and expressed concerns about security. They asked the news team not to video record or take “close up” photographs of the Heliport.
Meanwhile, unwilling to delve any further into what led to their release after 16 days in custody, sisters Diosmaris del Carmen Mejias Tortolero, 37; and Desiree del Carmen Mejias; 35; along with Maria Herrera, 28; had pleaded for leniency and compassion on Monday as they begged to see their young children.
The three wept and hugged their loved ones tightly as they returned home yesterday morning.
Saying they had been “terribly scarred” by the situation, the sisters expressed relief at being able to hug their children once again.
Expressing horror and disgust over the unsanitary conditions at the Heliport, one of the women said, “It was extremely unsanitary and unhygienic.”
The group said several people contracted the flu which then spread rapidly as they were all kept in close quarters. They claimed that upon requesting medication from their families, it was taken by the officers and distributed freely.
“The persons who the medication was intended for, never got it. What the authorities did was share the medication for everyone who presented with the virus.”
Expressing concerns that they have not been able to meet their 70 clients since they were initially detained on July 9 during a raid at the Apex Bar, St James, attorney Criston J Williams said he intended to write National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds to indicate that the migrants that remained in custody would be applying for refugee status.
At a media conference yesterday, Williams commended fellow attorney Gerald Ramdeen for securing the release of the eight migrants yesterday morning.
However, he asked, “What about the other persons who are present there? And how do we stop their deportation in the shortest possible time frame?”
Williams said he was not confident the authorities would abide by the wishes of the majority of the migrants who have indicated they do not wish to be sent back to Venezuela.
Seated next to activist Yesenia Gonzales, Williams said their next step was to provide Hinds with a spread-sheet of the list of migrants whom they are representing and simply request they not be deported.
Gonzales, meanwhile, said the Themas Foundation of the Americas continued to work with the migrants to highlight the unsanitary conditions.
Questions sent to the Minister of Foreign Affairs Dr Amery Brown, the Law Association of T&T and the UNHCR on the matter surrounding the pending deportation of over 100 migrants and how it will affect T&T’s international relations, international funding, the alleged infringement of human rights and the issue of refugee and asylum seekers status in T&T were not answered up to late yesterday.