A 58-year-old Indian who was detained by American customs officials last week for not possessing necessary immigration documents while entering the country died in custody at an Atlanta hospital.
Atul Kumar Babubhai Patel was taken in custody by United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement at the Atlanta City Detention Center for two days.
He died on Tuesday afternoon at the hospital with the officials stating the preliminary cause of his demise as complications from congestive heart failure.
Patel arrived at the Atlanta airport on May 10 on a flight from Ecuador.
US Customs and Border Protection subsequently denied him entry into the country as he did not possess the necessary immigration documents, the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement said in a statement.
Patel was transferred into the ICE custody last week at the Atlanta City Detention Center where he received an initial medical screening and was found to have high blood pressure and diabetes.
On Saturday, two days after being in the ICE custody, a nurse checking Patel's blood sugar noticed he had a breathing problem following which he was shifted to a hospital where he passed away.
ICE said it is firmly committed to the health and welfare of all those in its custody and is 'undertaking a comprehensive agency-wide review of the incident, as it does in all such cases'.
The agency the informed the Indian consular representatives who notified Patel's kin about his demise.
The agency added that fatalities in its custody are 'exceedingly rare' and occur at a fraction of the rate of the US detained population as a whole.
Patel is the eighth such individual who died in the custody of ICE the fiscal year 2017.
The recent deaths have drawn sharp criticism from immigrant rights activists, who have long decried conditions in immigration detention centres and called on the government to close such facilities.
President Donald Trump has called for increasing detention as part of his crackdown on illegal immigration.
IMAGE: Atlanta International Airport in Atlanta, Georgia, US. Photograph: Tami Chappell/Reuters