Raphael John-Lall
raphael.lall@guardian.co.tt
Venezuelans at the heliport detention facility in Chaguaramas are alleging that female detainees are being forced to have sex with guards to get more food, money or to be given special privileges. There is no independent oversight at the facility where females are detained and guarded by males, they claimed.
Females, ages 21 and 24, who spoke to the Sunday Guardian, gave an account of the "human rights abuses" and difficult conditions at the detention facility.
Apart from having to give their bodies to guards, detainees complained of the poor quality of food and water, cramped conditions and inadequate medical conditions.
The Heliport was created as a buffer zone to deal with the migrant crisis during the COVID-19 pandemic. Once a person is a non-national and deemed to be caught either on land or at sea in T&T, that individual is sent there to be quarantined and stays there until he or she is deported.
Detainees can be left languishing at the facility as there is no standard time in which immigration authorities deport Venezuelans and other foreigners to their home countries as even a High Court order can halt the process.
In April, an attempt to deport a Venezuelan woman who was granted refugee status by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) was blocked by the High Court. Justice Robin Mohammed granted an injunction blocking any move to repatriate Lourdes de Rojas.
According to the UNHCR website, on November 2, 2000, T&T became the 140th country to sign the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol–the foundations of international refugee law.
The UNHCR at that time said T&T’s accession to the Convention will assist the Government in determining refugee status and will help ensure that refugees in need of protection are treated according to international standards.
Although T&T's Government has not enforced this specific Convention, it has defended its human rights record on the issue of Venezuelan migrants.
Last November in its human rights report submitted to the United Nations, the T&T Government said in an attempt to address the influx of Venezuelan migrants within its borders and to protect the human rights of migrants and their families, in May 2019 the Government granted a 12-month amnesty under the Immigration (Amendment) Regulation 2019 and the Immigration (Amendment to the Second Schedule) Order 2019 in accordance with section 10 of the Immigration Act, Chap 18:01. Under this amnesty, Venezuelan migrants were required to be registered and were issued a registration card by the Immigration Division.
One detainee who spoke to the Sunday Guardian anonymously because of fear of victimisation, said apart from the girls having sex with guards in exchange for money as well as other favours, the food, water, and sleeping conditions are unfit for human beings.
Crying during the interview, the female migrant claimed that she has been threatened if she ever tells anyone what she has witnessed.
"I saw one of the young girls who is in her early 20s having sex with a Trinidadian man in the shower. I was told if I ever repeat what I saw there would be deadly consequences. I assume several of these young women have sex with guards because they need money or they may get benefits like extra food. It’s also possible the guards are just using their power to take advantage of these poor, vulnerable young girls."
Another detainee who has been at the detention centre for over one year described the conditions at the heliport as "horrible". She spoke in Spanish to this report who was able to translate.
"I damaged my knee and I also have blood pressure. I see a doctor but there is no interpreter. Sometimes there’s a lot of pepper in the food and I can’t eat it. I’ve told them about it many times. The water here also tastes bad and it makes me sick.
"The mattresses are very hard and hurt my back when I sleep. These days there isn’t even enough soap or toilet paper. There is no interpreter when we speak to medical personnel.
"I am here at the Heliport but no official ever explained that I will be deported. I never signed any deportation order. The only ones who informed me of that are my lawyers. As a human being, I have rights. Yet, they don’t seem to understand that."
Criston J Williams, managing partner of the law firm Criston J Williams and Co Attorneys-at-Law, has called for an investigation into these allegations of human rights abuses.
The company has clients who are Venezuelan refugees and the law firm has been involved in defending migrants who claim refugee status in T&T.
The complaint from many Venezuelan claiming refugee status is that although the UNHCR has granted them cards as refugees, the Government of T&T still does not recognise it and many are still deported.
The Sunday Guardian reached out to Williams to give his opinion on the claims made by the migrants at the Heliport.
He said there is an immigration detention centre in a military facility where detainees are referred to as ‘inmates’.
"That has to be an improper construct of a migrant detainee and under the guise of military secrets, they are creating a scenario where there is no oversight at the heliport. There’s no independent oversight where females are detained and guarded by males, this must be unheard of in any country which respects fundamental human rights," Williams said.
He said what is needed should these allegations be true is an independent investigation at the Heliport. "No one has been able to ascertain what goes on inside there. Once there is no oversight it creates, facilitates and perpetuates human rights abuses. Sexual human rights abuses are most egregious at this stage. There are people who the girls give sex and get good treatment, no sex and there’s bad treatment.”
The Sunday Guardian called Minister of National Security Fitzgerald Hinds to get his position on the allegations made and if he is aware of how the Heliport detention facility is being managed, but up to late yesterday he did not answer his phone.
The Sunday Guardian also called and sent a WhatsApp message to the phone of Chief of Defence Staff Darryl Daniel but he did not respond.
Human rights abuses
Williams also spoke to the Sunday Guardian about human rights abuses in general among the Venezuelan community in T&T.
Williams gave examples of how Venezuelans’ human rights are being abused in T&T.
"The loss of a right of the individual to their liberty and the security of the person which transcends into arbitrary detention by the state. The loss of that individual to be deemed equal before law and equal access to international conventions that T&T has signed up to.
"Also, the right of an individual to have their family life respected when parents are being deported. There is also the right of a migrant to be treated equally by public authorities. That has been eroded.
"The freedom of movement has also been totally eroded. There are migrants being defined as refugees yet they gave a deportation order against them. There are mental and psychological abuses also."
Williams spoke about the Immigration Manual, Volume 1, which serves as a guide for immigration officers in T&T, which he said is a good document but he is not sure that the Government is being guided by it.
"The first step is the Immigration Manual, Volume 1. Have they continued or discounted that? Even the failure to have a policy affects the persons that guard T&T’s borders. That will perpetuate further human rights abuses. I have seen a ship that sank and bodies washed up.
"We saw the baby that was also killed by the Coast Guard. There was a draft 2014 policy on T&T Immigration policies, however from 2014 to now it seems to have gone in the wrong direction which makes way for allegations of human rights abuses.
"Where there is no proper policy it makes room for abuse. Migrants are being shot at on boats maybe because the coast guards do not have an operational policy that acknowledges those types of persons crossing the borders."
Williams also gave the opinion that the Government does not have the "testicular fortitude" to ensure that immigration laws either be followed or if the laws are not working in the way they should, they should be modified.
"What should be amended is a simple inclusion of the word ‘refugee’ in the Immigration Act by definition of what is considered a ‘refugee.’ So we move away from having to rely on manuals to having something that is entrenched in legislation. As in all First World countries, there is an immigration act which defines a refugee."
Since the baby was shot and killed in February when Coast Guard fired upon a boat with migrants killing the baby in its mother’s arms, Williams wrote both the Ministry of National Security and the T&T Coast Guard requesting information but so far they have not obtained any information.
"We wrote to the Coast Guard by the way of the Freedom of Information Act and they indicated to us that there has not been any investigation. They have an incident report of the matter that is not in their custody as they gave it to the T&T Police Service (TTPS) and that’s all they can say. What type of organisation in the world where there is a Coast Guard organisation and a child is killed and they will not have an internal review?"
Counter-terrorism and immigration expert Dr Michael Jervis who is also the UK and Northern Ireland representative for the international parliament for Human rights and also spoke to the Sunday Guardian in the Zoom interview with Williams said T&T does not seem to have an immigration policy and it is that which is responsible for the "chaos" that exists.
"Even in the UK, we’ve got a similar issue. In our case, it has been found wanting, even to the extent in the UK where we are thinking about putting our refugees in the African country of Rwanda. This is completely crazy.
"In the T&T and Venezuelan case, we understand that there are some migrants that have got no real reason to be in T&T.
"Has T&T been applying the policy over the last eight years? That document is legitimate and it has a three-check system. The authorities have not complied with the system and the question is why."