Truro News

White House faces hard deadline on reunited migrant families

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The clock is ticking for the Trump administra­tion after a federal judge ordered thousands of migrant children and parents reunited within 30 days, sooner if the youngster is under five.

The hard deadline was set Tuesday night by U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw in San Diego after President Donald Trump’s order ending the forced separation of families at the Mexican border gave way to days of uncertaint­y, conflictin­g informatio­n and no word from the administra­tion on when parents might see their children again.

“This situation has reached a crisis level,” Sabraw wrote.

The order poses a host of logistical problems for the administra­tion, and it was unclear how it would meet the deadline.

Health and Human Services, which is in charge of the children, referred questions to the Justice Department.

The Justice Department said the ruling makes it “even more imperative that Congress finally act to give federal law enforcemen­t the ability to simultaneo­usly enforce the law and keep families together.”

“Without this action by Congress, lawlessnes­s at the border will continue,” the department said.

Sabraw, an appointee of Republican President George W. Bush, said children under five must be reunited with their parents within 14 days.

He also issued a nationwide injunction against future family separation­s, unless the parent is deemed unfit or doesn’t want to be with the child, and ordered the government to provide phone contact between parents and their children within 10 days.

The case was brought by the American Civil Liberties Union, which sued in March on behalf of a seven-year-old girl who was separated from her Congolese mother and a 14-year-old boy who was taken from his Brazilian mother.

“Tears will be flowing in detention centres across the country when the families learn they will be reunited,” said ACLU attorney Lee Gelernt.

More than 2,000 children have been separated from their parents in recent weeks and placed in government-contracted shelters under a now-abandoned policy toward families caught illegally entering the U.S.

Amid an internatio­nal outcry, Trump last week issued an executive order to stop the separation of families and said parents and children will instead be detained together.

But parents already separated from their children were left in the dark on when and how they would be reunited, and Homeland Security seemed only to sow

more confusion over the weekend.

“The facts set forth before the Court portray reactive governance — responses to address a chaotic circumstan­ce of the Government’s own making,” Sabraw wrote.

“They belie measured and ordered governance, which is central to the concept of due process enshrined in our Constituti­on.”

Since Trump issued the executive order, the administra­tion has been casting about for detention space for holding families together and has asked the courts to modify a 1997 settlement that generally bars the government from keeping children locked up with their parents for more than 20 days.

The task ahead could be monumental: Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar told Congress on Tuesday that his department still has custody of 2,047 immigrant children separated from their parents at the border — only six fewer than last Wednesday.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? A mother migrating from Honduras holds her one-year-old child while surrenderi­ng to U.S. Border Patrol agents after illegally crossing the border near Mcallen, Texas.
AP PHOTO A mother migrating from Honduras holds her one-year-old child while surrenderi­ng to U.S. Border Patrol agents after illegally crossing the border near Mcallen, Texas.

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