Ilo Juun ICE ekar etale jikin jerbal eo ilo Omaha im bōk 80 rijerbal jān Glen Valley Foods

ICE detained 76 people working at Glen Valley Foods in Omaha, NE. 200 workers at the JBS Ottumwa plant in Iowa lost their work authorization due to changes in immigration policy.

Aelōñ eo ḷọk, ICE, kumi eo ṇa etan immigration and customs enforcement rar kōṃṃane juon eṃakūt eo eḷap ilo kajojo jikin ko ñan aer etale pepa ko an aolep rilikin ro. Nuuj ko rej bar kwaḷọk ke armej ro ilo Los Angeles rar bōk buñtōn ko ñan aer kwaḷọk aer jab errā kōn wāwein kein rej waḷọk. Ke enaan kein rar waḷọk eṃōj an president Trump ba national guard to ren pojak ilo an ro jet rej jerbal ippān kein eo jab jeḷā kōn eṃakut eo an national guard ro. Ilo juje Juun 10, ICE ar bar kōṃṃane etale in jerbal ko aer ilo jikin kōṃṃan jalele ko ilo Omaha, Nebraska. Enañin 80 rijerbal rar bōke er jān Glen Valley Foods ālikin aer etale pepa ko aer. Ebọọl ro rej rally ñan aer kwaḷọk aer ḷōmṇak kōn wāwein kein rej waḷọk, ippān kumi kein rar rally ar bar koba ḷọk kumi eo ṇa etan (no kings) ro im rej tōmak kōn jiṃwe im maroñ ko an armij ro.

Last month, ICE launched aggressive raids to meet detainment quotas, with media attention focused on Los Angeles, sparking protests and raising concerns of government overreach as President Trump deployed the National Guard even though the state did not request assistance. On Tuesday June 10th, ICE raided a meat production plant in Omaha, Nebraska. Nearly 80 workers were detained working at Glen Valley Foods despite using E-Verify to ensure compliance with labor laws. Hundreds rallied in local response, among the nationwide organization of No Kings protests today.

Ilo aer wōnṃaanḷọk im kōṃṃani men kein ilo jikin jerbal ko, eḷap tata jikin ko rej kōṃṃan jalele kab jikin ṃōñā ko barāinwōt jikin ko redik ekōṃṃan bwe jerbal ko ren abur im jab eṃṃan. Barāinwōt ijoko rar kelet Trump, baaṃle ko, im jikuuḷ ko rej pukot kilen bwe ren jab pād ilo inepata elaññe ICE ro renaaj bōk er. Men kein rekōṃṃan bwe en abañ jerbal ko rej itok jān jikin jerbal ko reḷḷap, eo im ekojak bwe President Trump make ar ba “men kein rej waḷọk rekōṃṃan abañ in jerbal kein”. Taije eo Juun 12 ekkar ñan President Trump ar ba “jerbal kein rekōṃṃan bwe peejneej ko ak jikin jerbal ko ren ioon abañ ko”. Kōn wāwein kein ICE rein rej kōṃṃani ñan rijerbal ro ak rilikin ro ekōṃṃan bwe jikin jerbal ko ren bar kabbōk aer rijerbal ñan aer bōk jikin ro rejako.

As raids spread into service industries and in particular agriculture and food production in rural areas and small cities, resistance has grown—even in Trump-voting regions—where families and schools have fought to free detained community members. The aggressive policies are disrupting key industries, which President Trump has surprisingly acknowledged. On Thursday June 12th, President Trump admitted that his policies are harming businesses dependent on long-time immigrant labor: He acknowledged that the “very aggressive policy on immigration is taking very good, long-time workers away from them, with those jobs being almost impossible to replace.”

Ilo kar lalem iiō ko reṃootḷọk kijwōj “ar ippān doon” im jikin jerbal in ṃōñā ko rar “essential” (rej jikin ko kōj armij jej aikuj ñan mour) ak ilo aelōñ ko jiljino kiiō aolep armej ro rilikin ro rejab lamen ripalle rar jino aer ekkōl elaññe ICE ro rej etal ñan jikuuḷ, aupitōḷ, im ṃōn jar ko im bōki armej eo ilo ejjeḷọk mālim jān ekajet im likūti er ilo jikin kabuuj ko im kōrọọl er ñan ijoko jikier ilo ejjeḷọk etale ko. Aeloñ eo ḷọk, ar wōr 18 rimajōl ro rar kōrọọl er ñan Majōl ilo wa eo waan US military aircraft ak paluun. ICE ro rar etal ippān armej rein ñan Majōl (jab US marshall ro āinwōt kar ṃokta).

Just five years ago, we were “all in this together” and food production was “essential”. But, for the last six months immigrant communities, and anyone who might be mistaken or assumed to be an immigrant, have been on alert for ICE who can now come to schools, hospitals and churches, and who have been taking people without warrants, and detaining and deporting them without due process. Last month, 18 Marshallese were deported back to the Marshall Islands arriving in a US military aircraft escorted by armed immigration officials (instead of a US marshall as in the past).

Updated for translation from: https://chikinmelele.com/service-industries-impacted-by-increased-immigration-enforcement-ice-raid-of-meat-production-plant-in-omaha/

Kwomaroñ bar lale video jān Immigration Customs Enforecment bōtaab emaroñ jab eṃṃan ippaṃ.

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