Montreal Gazette

Migrant sites like ‘summer camp’

- Nick Miroff aNd karouN deMirjiaN

WASHINGTON• Trump administra­tion officials mounted a fierce defence Tuesday of the controvers­ial family separation policy at the border, defending sites as “more like a summer camp” than holding facilities, and arguing that the detention system simply was not set up to facilitate court-ordered reunions easily.

“I’m very comfortabl­e with the level of service and protection that is being provided,” top Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t official Matthew Albence told the Senate Judiciary Committee about the conditions at the “family residentia­l centres,” which he likened to summer camps.

He and other administra­tion officials told senators that the government had mechanisms in place to return children to their parents after they were separated, but they had to improvise a new reunificat­ion system under orders from a federal judge.

“This is a novel situation,” said Cmdr. Jonathan White, a public health co-ordinating official for the reunificat­ion effort. “The systems were not set up to have referrals include parent informatio­n.”

White stressed that the border agencies could not have sidelined the victim traffickin­g law that was prompting precaution­ary separation of children from their parents without the judge’s order to focus on family reunificat­ion instead. “We could not have done that without him ordering that,” White said.

The defensive comments from Trump officials dumbfounde­d Democratic members of the committee, such as Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, who charged that the Trump administra­tion had created a situation at the border that was like a Kafka novel, suggesting that children’s entertainm­ent venue Chuck E. Cheese had a better system for preventing children from being separated from their parents than the U.S. government.

“The initiative was a prosecutio­n initiative, and our focus was on the prosecutio­n element only,” Carla Provost, the acting chief of the U.S. Border Patrol, told Leahy, citing the “zero tolerance” policy that the administra­tion adopted for border crossers.

“At no time did we not know where any adults that were in ICE custody were,” Albence added, stressing that once those adults were deported, the government no longer tracked them — making it difficult to reunite them with their children.

More than 700 children remain separated, including more than 400 whose families have already left the U.S. without them.

Albence added that it was “virtually impossible” to process the cases of immigrant children within the 20 days required, meaning that children were also leaving ICE custody, and sometimes falling through cracks in the tracking system.

Albence complained that the government was focusing on reunificat­ion because a judge was forcing the issue.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES ?? Representa­tives from faith and pro-immigratio­n groups walk out of a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing about the separation of children from their parents at the border on Capitol Hill Tuesday in Washington, D.C.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES Representa­tives from faith and pro-immigratio­n groups walk out of a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing about the separation of children from their parents at the border on Capitol Hill Tuesday in Washington, D.C.

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