The Phnom Penh Post

Trump labels migrants ‘invaders’

- Ian Timberlake and Henry Morales Arana

US PRESIDENT Donald Trump on Sunday said migrants who “invade” the US should be deprived of legal due process, reinforcin­g his hardline stand despite an about-face on family separation­s that has seen more than 500 children reunited with relatives.

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

After images of children in chain-link enclosures sparked domestic and global outrage, the president ended the separation practice but has continued his hardline talk on immigratio­n.

He sees the issue as crucial ahead of midterm congressio­nal elections in November.

“We cannot allow all of these people to invade our Country,” Trump said Sunday on Twitter.

“When somebody comes in, we must immediatel­y, with no Judges or Court Cases, bring them back from where they came,” said Trump, suggesting they be handled without the due legal process guaranteed for “any person” by the US Constituti­on.

Nearly all of the arriving families have requested asylum.

“Our system is a mockery to good immigratio­n policy and Law and Order,” said Trump, who has repeatedly tried to link immigrants with crime.

His remarks came after the Department of Homeland Security released its first official data since Trump ended the family separation­s on Wednesday. It said 522 children separated as part of “zero tolerance” have been reunited with their families, but another 2,053 separated minors remained in the care of the US Department of Health and Human Services as of Wednesday.

“The United States government knows the location of all children in its custody and is working to reunite them with their families,” the department said in a statement on Saturday.

‘A great sadness’

Fleeing from impoverish­ed Central America, the arrivals say they are seeking a better life and also a refuge from criminal gangs terrorisin­g their region, which has one of the world’s highest murder rates.

Central American migrants deported from the US without their children have spoken of their anguish at seeing families split under the “zero tolerance” approach.

Ever Sierra, deported after trying to enter the US, said he planned to try again in a few days. He arrived back in Honduras with his eight-monthold daughter’s shoes hanging from his backpack. She was being held in a detention centre in McAllen, Texas, along with her mother.

Benjamin Raymundo, a 33year-old deported back to Guatemala, said he left his country in April with his son Roberto, aged five, but the pair were separated when immigratio­n officers in California stopped them.

The boy was eventually placed in a relative’s custody.

“It’s a great sadness for me, as if I’ll never see my son again,” Raymondo lamented.

Trump’s former deputy national security adviser, Tom Bossert, said the past week had provided “terrible optics” for the administra­tion, and “almost from the outset we didn’t have the capacity to detain these parents and children, together or separately”.

Speaking on ABC’s This Week, Bossert predicted that Trump’s executive order ending the family separation­s will not stand up in court because a judge had ruled in 2015 that even detaining parents and children together is “inhumane”.

US lawmakers on Sunday spoke of the need for a longerterm solution. But in a poisoned political climate, they have failed to advance either of two Republican immigratio­n bills in the House of Representa­tives, which the Republican­s control along with the Senate.

A hardline proposal was defeated last week and a vote on a “compromise” bill between the party’s hard-right and moderate factions has been pushed back, with signs it could not pass.

Trump and other hardline Republican­s accuse opposition Democrats of being soft on crime and immigratio­n.

On Saturday, former Republican presidenti­al hopeful Mike Huckabee posted a picture on Twitter of MS-13 gang members and joked that the heavily tattooed Latinos were the “campaign committee” for top Democrat Nancy Pelosi.

Trump frequently brings up the Hispanic gang when he talks of immigratio­n.

 ?? JOHN MOORE/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP ?? A two-year-old Honduran asylum seeker cries as her mother is searched and detained near the US-Mexico border in McAllen, Texas, on June 11.
JOHN MOORE/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP A two-year-old Honduran asylum seeker cries as her mother is searched and detained near the US-Mexico border in McAllen, Texas, on June 11.

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