New Jersey Governor Blames Out-Of-State Agitators for Inflaming Newark Ice Detention Protests
NEWARK, New Jersey, May 31 (Reuters) – Out-of-state agitators have escalated tensions at protests outside a Newark immigrant detention center, New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill said on Saturday, as the city imposed an overnight curfew around the embattled Delaney Hall facility.
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Sherrill, who had ordered state police to take control outside the facility, said five of six arrested Friday were from out of state, and that “national extremist groups” had joined Saturday’s protests, heightening tensions in the city.
“You should not be here,” she said of those who came to create chaos. “You are not helping the people detained at Delaney Hall. You’re not helping detainee families and you’re certainly not keeping New Jersey safe.”
Newark Mayor Ras Baraka imposed a nightly curfew in the half-mile area surrounding Delaney Hall effective from early on Sunday.
“Beginning at 12 a.m., Doremus Avenue will be closed to all pedestrian traffic. Vehicle access will be strictly limited to those with verified official business in the area. This curfew will remain in effect nightly from 9 pm. to 6 a.m. until further notice,” he said Sunday in a post on X.
State police on Friday set up “protected protest zones” after days of confrontations between protesters and federal agents outside Delaney, a 1,000-bed facility whose detainees went on a labor and hunger strike over what they called inhumane conditions and to demand their release.
“That’s exactly where our focus needs to be right now, advocating for better conditions for those inside the facility,” Sherrill said. “We can’t let what’s happening outside Delaney Hall take us away from that mission.”
Sherrill said she was “grateful to the vast majority of protesters who have assembled peacefully and raised their voices about Delaney Hall conditions.”
The company Geo Group (GEO.N) operates Delaney for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin has denied the allegations about the facility and called the involvement of state police a “win for law and order.”
But Sherrill, a Democrat, suggested federal officials had made the situation worse, with ICE using batons on protesters and taking other actions that she described as inappropriate for crowd control.
“They have been increasing tensions in a way that’s not helpful to public safety,” she said.
The governor, who has called for the closure of Delaney Hall, said her goal was to ensure peaceful protests and public safety — and avoid a surge of federal agents.
“What we have been working towards now is ensuring that ICE has no pretextual reason whatsoever to exacerbate this situation,” Sherrill said at a news conference.
Clashes between immigration officers and protesters occasionally have turned violent in other states, most notably in Minnesota, where federal personnel fatally shot two people and injured others.
State police have tried to set up areas for protesters to peacefully assemble, New Jersey officials said. But protesters who were ordered to disperse Friday night surrounded a law enforcement vehicle and made threats toward personnel, state police Lieutenant Colonel David Sierotowicz said on Saturday.
Some activists were seen retrieving face coverings, gas masks, fireworks, rocks and other projectiles from a nearby tent area, Sierotowicz said.
Video from Friday showed police advancing with riot shields and firing tear gas. Sierotowicz said police used standard tactics to move the crowd back, with no significant injuries to the public or law enforcement.
“We were not striking anybody last night,” he said.
Protests are fine as long as they remain peaceful, state officials said. At mid-afternoon on Saturday, dozens of protesters were chanting slogans but remaining behind the barriers that police had set up.
“Today and going forward, I urge those protesting outside of Delaney Hall to bring the temperature down, so we can focus on the detainees and their families,” Sherrill said.
(Reporting by Karen Freifeld in New York and Eduardo Munoz; additional reporting by Anusha Shah in Bengaluru; Editing by Sergio Non, Franklin Paul and Bernadette Baum)
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