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Koreans describe their anxiety following the US immigration raid as 'like a military operation.

South Korean workers returned home to their families on Friday, after spending a week in detention by U.S. Immigration authorities. They described their horror at the raid of their Georgia workplace and their relief that they were reunited with them.

One of the workers who participated in the raid on the 4th of September at the Hyundai Motor and LG Energy Solution car battery factory said, "It felt like a military operation." The authorities were deployed to the entire site within 10 minutes.

He declined to reveal his name, as did many other people who spoke with him after their charter plane had landed at Incheon Airport. This was due to the sensitive nature of the situation. Another worker confirmed that U.S. agents arrived in armoured vehicles, helicopters, and separated workers based on visa types. They arrested those with a B-1 visa or the ESTA Visa-Waiver Programme.

Some workers' phones were taken away, and they were unable inform their family members until their release.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security's largest single-site operation in history, the DHS detained 475 workers, including over 300 South Koreans, at the plant.

Officials in the United States said that the workers had engaged in activities outside the scope of the visa authorisations or overstayed their visas.

RELIEF AND ANGER

Hwang Insong, brother of an engineer detained said: "I feel relieved." "I couldn't sleep for a whole week because I was so worried."

Detainees' and their families' anxiety increased when the delay in their departure was caused by diplomatic disputes over their release terms.

"I didn't even know when I could leave." One of the workers said that was the most difficult part.

When asked about the conditions at the detention centre in Folkston, Georgia where they were kept, he replied: "It wasn't good."

Some complained about the food, while others said that the water smelled of bleach.

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement has not responded to questions regarding the alleged poor conditions of the facility.

The wife of a subcontractor engineer who only gave her surname Kim said that her husband was arrested on the first day of his work at the construction site. She added that she thought his B-1 visa allowed him to be a supervisor.

She expressed concern that he would have difficulty getting a visa to the United States and making business trips. "I'm worried about his career being ruined."

South Korean officials claimed on Thursday that U.S. president Donald Trump encouraged the South Koreans who were released to remain in the United States, and train Americans.

"I don’t think anyone wants to stay... after going through this, we are not sure whether I would go back," Jang Young-seon said, who had a B-1 Visa.

South Korea, an important ally of the United States in Asia, was shocked by the video and pictures of workers chained at the wrists and ankles.

Jang Young-eun, Jang's younger brother, said at the airport: "I was furious that an ally treated my brother like a thief." (Reporting and editing by Gareth Jones, Joyce Lee, and Hyunjoo Ji)

(source: Reuters)