A/HRC/7/12/Add.2
page 2
Summary
The present report is submitted in accordance with resolution 2001/52 of the Commission
on Human Rights following the official visit of the Special Rapporteur on the human rights of
migrants to the United States of America (the United States) between 30 April and 18 May 2007.
The purpose of the mission was to examine and report on the status of the human rights of
migrants living in the United States. For the purposes of this report, “migrants” refers to all
non-citizens living in the United States, including, among others, undocumented non-citizens
and non-citizens with legal permission to remain in the country, such as legal permanent
residents, work visa holders, and persons with refugee status. The Special Rapporteur thanks the
Government of the United States for extending an invitation for him to conduct such a mission.
The Special Rapporteur was disappointed, however, that his scheduled and approved visits to the
Hutto Detention Center in Texas and the Monmouth detention centre in New Jersey were
subsequently cancelled without satisfactory explanation.
While noting the Government’s interest in addressing some of the problems related to the
human rights of migrants, the Special Rapporteur has serious concerns about the situation of
migrants in the country, especially in the context of specific aspects of deportation and detention
policies, and with regard to specific groups such as migrant workers in New Orleans and the
Gulf Coast in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, migrant farm workers, and migrants in
detention facilities.
The Special Rapporteur wishes to highlight the fact that cases of indefinite detention - even
of migrants fleeing adverse conditions in their home countries - were not uncommon according
to testimonies he received. The Special Rapporteur learned from human rights advocates about
the lack of due process for non-citizens in United States deportation proceedings and their ability
to challenge the legality or length of their detention; as well as about the conditions of detained
asylum-seekers, long-term permanent residents and parents of minors who are United States
citizens. In some cases immigrant detainees spend days in solitary confinement, with overhead
lights kept on 24 hours a day, and often in extreme heat and cold. According to official sources,
the United States Government detains over 230,000 people a year - more than three times the
number of people it held in detention nine years ago.
The Special Rapporteur notes with dismay that xenophobia and racism towards migrants in
the United States has worsened since 9/11. The current xenophobic climate adversely affects
many sections of the migrant population, and has a particularly discriminatory and devastating
impact on many of the most vulnerable groups in the migrant population, including children,
unaccompanied minors, Haitian and other Afro-Caribbean migrants, and migrants who are, or
are perceived to be, Muslim or of South Asian or Middle Eastern descent.
The Special Rapporteur notes that the United States lacks a clear, consistent, long-term
strategy to improve respect for the human rights of migrants. Although there are national laws
prohibiting discrimination, there is no national legislative and policy framework implementing
protection for the human rights of migrants against which the federal and local programmes and
strategies can be evaluated to assess to what extent the authorities are respecting the human
rights of migrants.