To stay or to go?
Hannah Dreier, The Washington Post
Dec. 26, 2020
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1of3Kevin Euceda, an asylum seeker from Honduras, in detention at Farmville, Va. As the novel coronavirus sickened detainees in the facility, Kevin wrestled with the question of whether he was better off pursuing his asylum claim or asking to be deported.Washington Post photo by Michael S. WilliamsonShow MoreShow Less
2of3Outside the town of Farmville, Va., is a holding center for immigrants detained by federal authorities. The facility was the site of one of the largest outbreaks of the novel coronavirus in the immigration detention system. The picture above is from 2010.Washington Post photo by Michael S. WilliamsonShow MoreShow Less
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The vulnerable protestor
A year after alleged police excesses against protesting students at Jamia and AMU, jurisprudence to protect them, provide redress remains inadequate criminalisation.
New Delhi | December 17, 2020 4:47:32 pm
The use of force against protesting and non-protesting students of JMI and AMU continued in the hostels, library, mosque, etc. long after they had retreated inside the campus. (PTI/File)
Written by Ishita Chakrabarty and Madhur Bharatiya
On December 15, 2019, when students on the Jamia Millia Islamia (JMI) campus organised a protest over police violence against anti-CAA protestors two days before, the police and paramilitary personnel attempted to stop them using methods that went beyond simple crowd-control means (batons, teargas, rubber bullets and live ammunition). Similar treatment was meted out to anti-CAA student protestors at Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) who voiced their concerns against the excessive