The Telegram (St. John's)

Confusion and uncertaint­y at the border after Trump acts

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The federal government wrestled with the fallout Thursday over President Donald Trump’s move to stop separating immigrant families, with no clear plan to reunite the more than 2,300 children already taken from their parents and Congress again failing to take action on immigratio­n reform.

Democratic mayors and other leaders travelled to the border to step up pressure on the White House over its hardline immigratio­n policies, and the Justice Department went to court in attempt to overturn a decades-old court settlement that limits to 20 days the amount of time migrant children can be locked up with their families.

And in the Texas border city of Mcallen, civil rights lawyer Efren Olivares said federal prosecutor­s unexpected­ly dropped charges against 17 immigrants due to be sentenced for improperly entering the country — a claim the U.S. attorney’s office denied.

The confusion and uncertaint­y resulted from the abrupt ending Wednesday of a White House policy that separated more than 2,300 children from their parents over the past several weeks. The practice set off an outcry from all corners of the world, with the images and sounds of crying children dominating the news.

Asked Thursday whether his administra­tion has abandoned its “zero tolerance’’ policy of prosecutin­g all adults caught illegally crossing the border, the president did not answer

directly but showed no sign of softening.

“We have to be very, very strong on the border. If we don’t do it, you will be inundated with people and you really won’t have a country,’’ Trump said.

The Justice Department asked a federal judge to change the rules regarding the detention of immigrant children who enter the country illegally, seeking permission to detain them for longer than 20 days in an effort to keep them together with their parents.

After Trump’s executive order, a host of unanswered

questions remained, including what will happen to the children already separated from their parents and where the government will house all the newly detained migrants, with the system already bursting at the seams.

A Defence Department official said the Pentagon has agreed to provide space on military bases to hold up to 20,000 migrant children detained after illegally crossing the Mexican border.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the arrangemen­t has not yet been announced. It was first

reported by The Washington Post.

It was unclear which bases would be used. But the Health and Human Services Department has assessed four as prospectiv­e housing for children: Fort Bliss, Goodfellow Air Force Base and Dyess Air Force Base in Texas, and Little Rock Air Force Base in Arkansas.

In Mcallen, Olivares, a lawyer with the Texas Civil Rights Project, said he did not know whether the 17 immigrants whose cases he said were dropped would be reunited with their children immediatel­y or released altogether.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? A group of immigrants from Honduras and Guatemala seeking asylum stand in line at the bus station after they were processed and released by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Thursday.
AP PHOTO A group of immigrants from Honduras and Guatemala seeking asylum stand in line at the bus station after they were processed and released by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Thursday.

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