BFF-10-11 Migrant parents deported from US voice anguish as opposition keeps up pressure

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Migrant parents deported from US voice anguish as opposition keeps up
pressure

WASHINGTON, June 24, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Central American migrants deported
from the US without their children spoke of their anguish at seeing their
families split under President Donald Trump’s “zero tolerance” approach
Saturday, as protesters kept up the pressure against the “barbaric” policy.

Trump on Wednesday ordered an end to the family separations which have
sparked domestic and global outrage, but the fate of the more than 2,300
separated children remains unclear.

Some 500 children have already been reunited with family members, CNN
reported, quoting border officials.

How quickly the rest of the reunifications can be carried out remains a
major question. Lawyers working to bring families back together said they
were struggling through a labyrinthine process — while more migrants
continue to arrive.

Ever Sierra, deported after trying to enter the US, told AFP he planned to
try again in a few days.

He arrived back in Honduras with his eight-month-old daughter’s shoes
hanging from his backpack. She was being held in a detention center in
McAllen, Texas, along with her mother.

Benjamin Raymundo, a 33-year-old who was deported back to Guatemala, told
AFP he left his home country in April with his five-year-old son Roberto, but
the pair were separated when they were stopped by immigration officers in
California.

A brother-in-law who lives in the US and a lawyer managed to find the
child’s whereabouts and the boy was eventually placed in this relative’s
custody.

“It’s a great sadness for me, as if I’ll never see my son again,” he
lamented. Raymundo said he has no plans for now to return to the United
States. He hopes his son will be granted asylum.

In an effort to staunch the flow of tens of thousands of migrants from
Central America and Mexico arriving at the southern boundary every month,
Trump in early May had ordered that all those crossing the border illegally
would be arrested, and their children held separately as a result.

In an about-face, he then ordered an end the splitting up of parents and
children, saying it was administration policy to “maintain family unity…
where appropriate and consistent with law and available resources.”

“I didn’t like the sight or the feeling of families being separated,” he
said.

– Protests continue –

Democratic lawmakers kept up the pressure Saturday, with roughly two dozen
of them visiting a detention facility where children are being held.

Jackie Speier, a California congresswoman, toured the facility in McAllen,
Texas. In a televised news conference, she said she saw children “under the
age of five who were segregated from their parents and were crying… They’re
in cells and in cages.”

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Another California congresswoman, Barbara Lee, added: “The children
especially are traumatized,” and she called the Trump administration’s
immigration policy “barbaric.”

Protest marches were scheduled this weekend in several cities, and advocacy
groups calling for a nationwide “Families Belong Together” protest on June
30.

In San Diego, around 1,500 demonstrators gathered, with many wearing
jackets featuring the statement “We really care, do you?” — referencing
Melania Trump’s jacket emblazoned with “I really don’t care. Do U?”

Yolanda Torres, who arrived in the US from Mexico aged 9, told AFP: “We
arrived with nothing, we didn’t even have a place to sleep.

“I don’t want to imagine if they had locked me in fencing.”

– Task force –

US Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) Alex Azar meanwhile issued
an order Friday to create a reunification task force, Politico reported,
citing an internal document it had obtained.

Reflecting the breadth and complexity of the challenge, the document orders
the department’s preparedness and response office — which deals with
emergencies and public health disasters — to assist its refugee resettlement
office with the effort.

Politico quoted HHS spokesperson Evelyn Stauffer as saying that Azar was
“bringing to bear all the relevant resources of the department in order to
assist in the reunification or placement of unaccompanied alien children and
teenagers with a parent or appropriate sponsor.”

The department did not immediately respond to an AFP request for
confirmation.

The Pentagon is making contingency plans to house thousands of arrivals on
US military bases. Defense Department officials said as many as 20,000 could
be sheltered on bases in Texas, Arkansas and New Mexico if need be.

Nearly all of the arriving families have officially requested asylum,
citing the high levels of violence in their home countries.

The separations have reportedly sparked intense debate even within the
White House — but Trump has remained unapologetic, accusing his political
rivals of exaggerating the problem for political gain.

“Open Borders Democrats… just want everyone to be released into our
country no matter how dangerous they are,” he said in his weekly address
Saturday, again trying to link immigrants with crime.

“They can be killers, they can be thieves, they can be horrible people —
the Democrats say it’s okay for them to be in our country. I don’t think so.”

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