Jesus Chirinos, brother of Deysi Marcano, the Venezuelan migrant who tried to end her life earlier this month, is calling on the T&T Government to release his sister and her three children as well as other Venezuelan migrants who are detained at the Chaguaramas Heliport.
"It was through desperation that my sister tried to kill herself. It cannot be that my family is going through this and T&T’s authorities have not been able to free them. We have benefits in T&T that our country Venezuela does not have because of the hunger that we are going through there. In the name of God, some children are losing their rights. They are being imprisoned as criminals and drug traffickers," he said in a statement issued by Marcano’s attorney, Criston J Williams, managing partner of the law firm Criston J Williams and Co Attorneys-at-Law.
Williams said the incident involving Marcano does not come as a surprise, given the poor and stressful conditions under which migrants at the heliport are forced to live.
Attorney Criston J Williams.
The attorney believes there must be an urgent review of the operations of the heliport.
In May female migrants had complained that they were the victims of sexual abuse and poor living conditions at the heliport. Apart from having to give their bodies to guards, detainees have complained of the poor quality of food and water, cramped conditions and inadequate medical conditions.
At times, detainees are unable to contact relatives.
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.
"It was opened in 2020, is situated on a military base, and is not subjected to any independent oversight. This must be a wrong construct. What is clear is that there are numerous complaints as to its operation from inception, and it clearly does not comply with international standards. I think, very urgently, there must be a review of its operation," Williams said.
He is calling on Minister of National Security Fitzgerald Hinds to meet with the relevant stakeholders, including attorneys, to discuss the operations at the heliport facility.
According to the medical report dated July 13, 2022, that the Sunday Guardian received, the Medical Department of the T&T Defence Force Headquarters stated that on July 2, 2022, Marcano attempted "self-harm by slitting both upper limbs with a sharp instrument".
The report stated that she was taken to the Port-of-Spain General Hospital, and treated and discharged back to the heliport with a referral to a mental health clinic.
"As a precaution, on return, Miss Marcano and the children were transferred to the Medical Infirmary for observation and supervision. Miss Marcano remained an inpatient at St Ann's Hospital for seven days and was subsequently discharged to our care on July 12," the report stated.
"It remains my opinion, as having managed Miss Marcano from inception (on arrival at heliport) that Miss Marcano’s mental health has deteriorated over her period of confinement and that she should be released from heliport under an Order of Supervision as her mental state is not expected to improve since confinement at the heliport is the main underlying stressor."
Williams spoke to the Sunday Guardian about the ongoing court case to have the detained minors freed.
"The matter came up today (Thursday) in the Court of Appeal for hearing, so this is a matter where we have three minors locked up for over a year." Their mother, who has been in custody for the same amount of time, attempted self-harm, he said. "Even the prison’s doctor said that she ought to be released under supervision given her state of mind. The matter before the court has now gone to October.”
Attorneys representing a group of Venezuelan children currently detained at the heliport have said that they intend to file civil proceedings against the State for unlawful detention. Their threat follows Thursday’s ruling by five law lords at the Privy Council that the policy of the Office of the Attorney General to keep migrant children detained without issuing deportation orders in their names was unlawful.
Justice Devindra Rampersad ordered the Chief Immigration Officer to make arrangements for the local United Nations High commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to meet with the group of five, which includes children, to confirm their asylum-seeker status. Rampersad also ordered immigration officials to release them on orders of supervision pending the outcome of a request for a permit from Hinds and their asylum claim.
The State appealed the judge’s orders, but when it came up for hearing on Thursday, Justices Gregory Smith and Vasheist Kokaram referred to the Privy Council’s ruling delivered earlier that day and invited submissions on the implication the ruling had on the case before them. They have adjourned the hearing to October.
Human rights groups: T&T violating human rights
Venezuelan human rights lawyer Damarys Rangel, based in Florida, United States of America, and who is the president of a human rights group, Human Rights DR spoke to the Sunday Guardian by phone and said that if T&T does not respect human rights and free migrant adults and children at the heliport then the international community will view the country as a violator of human rights.
Rangel denounced the "arbitrary detention" of the minors at the heliport.
"The results of T&T’s Authorities’ actions against migrant children and their representatives are isolation, denial of justice, torture, cruel and inhuman treatment. They are violating their fundamental rights as children. This has also been denounced by some stakeholders in T&T who understand that this is illegal detention."
She also called on the Governments of Venezuela and T&T to do more to safeguard the rights of migrants.
Social activist Yesenia Gonzales wants a meeting with Hinds on the issue of the alleged abuses of migrants’ human rights.
"The Government of T&T is not doing enough to deal with the problems that migrants face in this country. The Government knows international law. The Government needs to launch an investigation into what is going on at the heliport and conditions in general for migrants in T&T."
The Sunday Guardian called Hinds for a response, but he did not answer his phone.