A Palestinian woman who has been held in an immigration jail for nearly a year after she attended a protest in New York City said she suffered a seizure after fainting and hitting her head last week, an episode she linked to ''filthy'' and ''inhumane'' conditions inside the privately run detention facility.
Leqaa Kordia, 33, was hospitalized for three days following the seizure, which she said was the first of her life. She has since returned to the Prairieland Detention Facility in Texas, where she has been held since March.
In a statement released through her lawyers on Thursday, Kordia said she was shackled the entire time she was hospitalized and prevented from calling family or meeting with her lawyers.
''For three days in the emergency room, my hands and legs were weighed down by heavy chains as they drew my blood and gave me medications,'' Kordia said. ''I felt like an animal. My hands are still full of marks from the heavy metal.''
Her doctors, she said, told her the seizure may have been the result of poor sleep, inadequate nutrition and stress. Her lawyers previously warned that Kordia, a devout Muslim, had lost 49 pounds (22 kilograms) and fainted in the shower, in part because the jail had denied her meals that comply with religious requirements.
''I've been here for 11 months, and the food is so bad it makes me sick,'' the statement continued. ''At Prairieland, your daily life — whether you can have access to the food or medicine you need or even a good night's sleep — is controlled by the private, for-profit business that runs this facility.''
Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press, but said in a statement to The New York Times that Kordia wasn't being mistreated and was receiving proper medical care.
A resident of New Jersey who grew up in the West Bank, Kordia was among around 100 people arrested outside Columbia University during protests at the school in 2024.