8A z FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2019 z USA TODAY NEWS
JACKSON, Miss. – Nearly half of the
680 people detained in Wednesday’s
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforce-
ment raidsat food processing plants
across Mississippi were released the
same day, according to and ICE spokes-
man.
Bryan Cox, the spokesman, con-
firmed Thursday morning that 300 peo-
ple were released from custody
Wednesday night.
The raids occurred in small towns
near Jackson with a workforce made up
largely of Latino immigrants, including
Bay Springs, Carthage, Canton, Morton,
Pelahatchie and Sebastapol. About 600
agents fanned out across the plants in-
volving several companies, surrounding
the perimeters to prevent workers from
fleeing.
The raids follow President Donald
Trump’s calls for widespread enforce-
ment of immigration lawsand comes af-
ter several crackdowns in other states.
Matthew Albence, U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement’s acting di-
rector, told The Associated Press that
the raids could be the largest such oper-
ation thus far in any single state.
In an emailed statement Wednesday
morning, U.S. Attorney Mike Hurst said,
“U.S. Immigration and Customs En-
forcement’s Homeland Security Inves-
tigations special agents are executing
federal search warrants today at multi-
ple locations across the state of Missis-
sippi as part of a coordinated operation
with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the
Southern District of Mississippi pursu-
ant to ongoing HSI administrative and
criminal investigations.”
In a second statement, Hurst said via
email, “The execution of federal search
warrants today was simply about en-
forcing the rule of law in our state and
throughout our great country.”
Bryan Cox, ICE spokesperson, said
everyone taken into custody and de-
tained Wednesday will be processed but
“not everyone is going to be (perma-
nently) detained.”
“You are going to have persons re-
leased,” he said. “ICE makes custody de-
termination on a case-by-case basis
based on the totality of their circum-
stances.”
The names of the plants has not been
publicly released by ICE officials.
However, reporters were on scene at
the Koch Foods processing plant in Mor-
ton.
Another included the Peco Chicken
Processing Plant in Canton.
In an emailed statement, Peco Foods
Inc. confirmed raids took place at three
of their facilities – Canton, Bay Springs
and Sebastopol. The company is “fully
cooperating” with authorities, the
statement read.
Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lu-
mumba in a statement called the U.S.
immigration raids Wednesday “dehu-
manizing and ineffective.”
The mayor then called on “faith in-
stitutions” in the community to be-
come sanctuaries for “our immigrant
neighbors.”
In his statement, Lumumba said
the raids “will only further alienate
communities from law enforcement.”
However, Councilman Ashby Foote
disagreed with the mayor and said
calling on churches in the community
to act on his behalf was misguided.
“I think the mayor’s statement was
a mistake. We’re a nation of laws and
when you don’t have laws, you have
chaos,” he said.
The crackdown on immigration in
Mississippi comes on top of a mass
shooting in El Paso, Texas, where the
gunman appears to have specifically
targeted immigrants. The shooting has
had a chilling effect on immigrantsin
the metro Jackson area.
Contributing: Justin Vicory, (Jack-
son) Clarion Ledger
ICE released 300 of 680
arrested in roundups
Agents raid processing
plants in Mississippi
Sarah Fowler
Clarion Ledger
USA TODAY NETWORK
Handcuffed workers await transportation to a processing center after a raid
Wednesday by U.S. immigration officials at a Koch Foods plant in Morton, Miss.
Immigration officials raided several food processing plants.ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP
a report co-author, told The Associat-
ed Press. “The threat of climate change
affecting people’s food on their dinner
table is increasing.”
The review says climate change
threatens our food supply “through in-
creasing temperatures, changing pre-
cipitation patterns, and greater fre-
quency of some extreme events.”
The IPCC report, published Thurs-
day and titled “Climate Change and
Land,” is the latest from scientists
around the globe studying climate
change and how humans can stop – or
contribute to – global temperature in-
creases.
U.N. countries agreed during the
Paris climate change conference in
2015 that global temperature increases
need to be kept below 2 degrees Cen-
tigrade to prevent the most cata-
strophic effects of climate change.
That 2-degree measure is a conserva-
tive estimate, and countries agreed to
strive to keep the rise below 1.5 de-
grees. President Donald Trump an-
nounced in 2017 his decision to with-
draw the United States from the Paris
climate agreement.
“Warming over land has occurred at
a faster rate than the global mean, and
this has had observable impacts on the
land system,” the U.N. report authors
wrote.
The report focuses on how farming
and food production further the prob-
lem. The IPCC estimates that 25% to
30% of all greenhouse gas emissions
come from food systems.
Changing the food we eat by
switching to healthy and sustainable
diets full of grains, fruits, vegetables
and nuts could reduce greenhouse gas
emissions. Meat is identified as “the
single food with the greatest impact on
the environment” in the report.
Food waste is identified as a major
problem: About a third of all food pro-
duced is lost or wasted, according to
the report.
Climate
Continued from Page 1A
The report estimates 25% to 30% of
all greenhouse gas emissions come
from food systems.
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