Florida plan for ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ migrant jail sparks chorus of outrage

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"Outrage Grows Over Florida's Migrant Detention Camp in the Everglades"

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The proposed construction of a migrant detention camp in the Florida Everglades, dubbed 'Alligator Alcatraz' by state officials, has ignited widespread outrage among environmental groups, immigration rights advocates, and the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians. The facility, set to accommodate up to 5,000 detainees in tents under extreme heat conditions, is part of an aggressive immigration enforcement strategy aimed at detaining 3,000 undocumented migrants daily. Critics, including Democratic Congressman Maxwell Frost, have condemned the project as a cruel spectacle, particularly given the site’s harsh environment filled with alligators, Burmese pythons, and mosquitoes. The state has allocated taxpayer and Homeland Security funds for this initiative, following the controversial seizure of the land from Miami-Dade County by Governor Ron DeSantis under emergency powers. Many argue that this approach represents inhumane treatment of vulnerable populations, exacerbated by the summer heat in South Florida, where the heat index often exceeds 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37.8 degrees Celsius).

Environmental advocates have raised significant concerns about the ecological impact of establishing such a camp in the Everglades, a region that has already been the focus of substantial restoration efforts. Local leaders, such as Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava, have expressed fears that the construction will reverse decades of ecological progress and harm the surrounding environment. Critics also highlight that the site was deemed unsuitable for development as far back as the 1960s. The Miccosukee Tribe has drawn parallels between this detention facility and historical injustices faced by Native Americans, urging the state to reconsider its plans in favor of a location that would have less detrimental effects on both culture and environment. Immigration advocates view the camp as part of a broader strategy by the DeSantis administration to align with Trump-era policies that prioritize strict immigration enforcement, often at the expense of humane treatment and environmental stewardship. They argue that the facility is designed to inflict suffering rather than provide necessary infrastructure for detainees.

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Environmental groups, immigration rights activists and a Native American tribe have decried the construction of a harsh outdoor migrant detention camp in theFloridaEverglades billed by state officials as “Alligator Alcatraz”.

Crews began preparing the facility at a remote, largely disused training airfield this week in support of theTrump administration’s aggressive goal of arresting and incarcerating 3,000 undocumented migrants every day.

It is among a number of controversial new Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) jailsappearing around the countryas the number of detentions by the agencysurges dramatically.

Florida officials say the Everglades camp, which has been criticized by the Democratic congressman Maxwell Frost as “a cruel spectacle”, will open in the first week of July – a month in which south Florida’s daily heat index regularly exceeds 100F (37.8C).

Paid for by Florida taxpayers and homeland security department funds, the project came about after the stateseized the 39-square-mile sitefrom its owners, Miami-Dade county, under emergency powers enacted by the Republican governor, Ron DeSantis. It now faces staunch opposition from an alliance of groups.

These groups say housing up to 5,000 detainees in tents in the heat and humidity of the Florida summer, at a site surrounded by marshes and wetlands containing alligators, Burmese pythons and swarms of mosquitoes, amounts to inhumane treatment.

James Uthmeier, the state’s hard-right attorney general, laughed off the criticism.

“We believe in the swamp down here in Florida. We are swamp creatures,” he told the conservative podcast host Benny Johnson in areveal of the schemeon Monday that bordered on mockery.

“There’s no way in and no way out. The perimeter’s already set by Mother Nature. People get out, there’s not much waiting for them other than pythons and alligators.”

The airfield’s 11,000ft runway, he said, was perfect for large planes bringing in scores of undocumented persons detained by Ice from all over the US.

“There’s a lot of low-hanging fruit,” said Uthmeier, who washeld in civil contempt by a federal judgethis month for continuing to enforce a state immigration law she blocked.

The Miccosukee Tribe of Indians condemned the use of its ancestral lands in the Big Cypress national preserve for detention purposes, citing parallels with the government’s mass roundup and forced removal of Native Americans in the 19th century.

“The state would save substantial taxpayer dollars by pursuing its goals at a different location with more existing infrastructure and less environmental and cultural impacts to the Big Cypress and Tribal lands,” Talbert Cypress, chair of the Miccosukee Tribe, saidin a statementposted to social media.

Environmental fears have been raised by, among others, the Friends of the Everglades group, and the mayor of Miami-Dade, Daniella Levine Cava, who sent the Guardian a statement detailing her “significant concerns about the scope and scale of the state’s effort”.

She said the project would have a “potentially devastating impact to the Everglades”, and noted that the state and federal government had invested billions of dollars in Everglades restoration efforts, some of which she fears could now be undone.

“We continue to have concerns about how a facility at this scale can operate without impacts to the surrounding ecosystem,” she said.

Eve Samples, executive director of Friends of the Everglades, said the site was found unsuitable for development in the 1960s, when ambitious plans to make it a six-runwayEverglades jetportwith monorail service ferrying tourists to Florida’s east and west coasts, was thwarted by environmental activism.

“All the reasons this was terrible back then still exist today,” she said.

“These are really valuable and protected Everglades wetlands, and if we move forward with a thousand-bed prison detention facility, whether it’s temporary or not, there will be impacts from ancillary development, water and sewer impacts, water supply needs, traffic impacts. Those impacts were analyzed a half-century ago, and we know that they would be negative.

“Combined with theassault on Florida state parkslast summer, and therock mine proposalthat we’re currently fighting in the Everglades, it suggests the DeSantis administration is out of touch with what Floridians want, which is to protect the Everglades and our last remaining green spaces.”

Neither the Florida department of emergency management, which is managing construction of the camp, nor Uthmeier’s office responded to requests for comment.

Immigration advocates, meanwhile, say the Everglades camp represents a sinister ramping up of the DeSantis’s already vigorous endorsement of Donald Trump’s agenda. TheTampa Bay Times reportedon Wednesday that a second new detention facility, at the Florida national guard’s Camp Blanding training center west of Jacksonville, was in the works.

“He just always has to throw red meat to his base, always has to generate controversy and polarization,” said Thomas Kennedy, spokesperson for the Florida Immigrant Coalition.

“So obviously, they pick the most controversial site possible, right in the Everglades, using language like the alligators and the snakes, making it seem like it’s going to be like a medieval castle with a moat.

“There’s no adequate running water or plumbing facilities. Uthmeier is out there saying we don’t need to build brick and mortar because we’ll just throw some tents up in the middle of the swamp, in July, in hurricane season, with the heat, no proper infrastructure and the mosquitoes.

“It’s designed to enact suffering.”

Frost, in a statement, called Uthmeier “a Trump sycophant”, and said the Everglades project was “disgusting”.

“Donald Trump, his administration, and his enablers have made one thing brutally clear: they intend to use the power of government to kidnap, brutalize, starve, and harm every single immigrant they can,” he said.

“They target migrants, rip families apart, and subject people to conditions that amount to physical and psychological torture. Now, they want to erect tents in the blazing Everglades sun and call it immigration enforcement. They don’t care if people live or die; they only care about cruelty and spectacle.”

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Source: The Guardian