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Haiti’s Unforgivable Blackness

Haiti’s Unforgivable Blackness

The images of Border Patrol agents chasing Haitian migrants on horseback struck a nerve. How did we get here?

Into America · Nana Gyamfi, Trymaine Lee, Garry Pierre-Pierre

September 30, 202123m 34sExplicit

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Show Notes

On September 19th, photographers captured a harrowing scene at the US Mexico border: Border Patrol agents, on horseback, chasing and intimidating a large group of Haitian migrants as they tried to cross into Texas.

The images sparked outrage, and President Joe Biden eventually condemned the actions of the agents. But since that day, the Department of Homeland Security has expelled nearly 4,000 Haitian migrants on 37 flights to Haiti — without giving them a chance to claim asylum — under a Trump-era public health rule designed to protect the US from incoming disease. 

Nana Gyamfi, the executive director of the Black Alliance for Just Immigration, says that the administration is hiding behind policy, rather than standing up for migrants. And for people like Garry Pierre-Pierre, a Hatian-American journalist who founded the Haitian Times news site, it’s been hard to feel like he’s stuck between his adoptive country and his homeland. 

For a transcript, please visit https://www.msnbc.com/intoamerica

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Topics

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