USA: Security guard fired after incident with Venezuelan migrant

According to the Times, NGOs have denounced that migrants leave the shelters because they are allegedly harassed and assaulted by other residents and mistreated by their staff.


Courtesy | New York has received more than 8,000 emigrants, mostly Venezuelans

A New York shelter security guard was suspended without pay Wednesday after a video was released of him punching a Venezuelan immigrant who recently arrived in the city in the face, according to The New York Times.

The video shows the migrant, identified by the newspaper as Meiver Martínez, annoyed, yelling at the officer repeatedly in Spanish, “Don’t hit me,” and then kicks a locker. Then the officer, whose name has not been revealed, and who was staring at him, punches him on the cheek.

New York has received more than 8,000 migrants, mostly Venezuelans, and they have been sent to city shelters or hotels contracted by the City Council.

According to the Times, Martinez, 21, said the officer had been harassing him because he was slow to get out of bed. Also that after the incident about eight officers jumped on him, kicked him and shot him with a stun gun three times.

Martínez, who arrived in the city a month ago, also assured that he was handcuffed and taken by ambulance to a hospital, where he was treated, and that he was not charged with any crime.

The Department of Homeless Services, which runs the shelters, said it does not tolerate “any form of violence or misconduct” and is investigating the incident, which occurred at a Brooklyn borough shelter.

According to the Times, NGOs have denounced that migrants leave the shelters because they are allegedly harassed and assaulted by other residents and mistreated by their staff.

The video has caused consternation in organizations such as New York Makes the Road, which has demanded that the Administration of Mayor Eric Adams take “immediate” measures to guarantee the safety and well-being in the shelters.

Meanwhile, the Venezuelan activist Jesús Aguais, director of Aids for Life, pointed out that this incident is an isolated case, that not all those who have arrived should be judged for this fact, and that both versions should be known.

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