China Daily

Raise her up

Thousands call for families to be reunited during protests over detention facilities

- By LIU YINMENG in Los Angeles teresaliu@chinadaily­usa.com

Chanting “Trump, where is your heart?”, a sea of protesters gathered in blazing heat in Los Angeles on Saturday to march against a White House policy that separates thousands of children from parents who crossed the US border illegally.

The event is part of the “Families Belong Together” protest organized by the nonprofit MoveOn and numerous rights groups.

From coast to coast, in the rain or under the burning sun, tens of thousands of people took to the streets across the United States to protest the Trump administra­tion’s “zero tolerance” immigratio­n policy that has resulted in over 2,000 children being separated from their families.

Organizers said events had been planned across the country, with Washington as the main protest venue, calling the rallies a forum for people to stand up to the president’s controvers­ial immigratio­n policies.

People carrying self-made signs jammed the streets around Los Angeles City Hall and heard emotional speeches from political leaders such as California Senator Kamala Harris, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, as well as celebritie­s Star Wars-themed

sign gather during a rally to protest the Trump administra­tion’s approach to illegal border crossings and separation of children from immigrant parents on Saturday in Salt Lake City.

like singer-songwriter John Legend and actress Cher.

Harris said it was a moment for the country to reflect and encouraged people to take a moment and think about who they want to be.

“I believe the answer includes saying: We are better than this. We are better than having these detention facilities that are prisons where we house mothers who have been ripped from their breast-feeding children behind barbed wire, we are better than this,” said Harris, while some of the crowd energetica­lly responded “We are! We are!”

Garcetti called on the White House to reunite the families, protect the Dreamers, and pass comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform.

“I’ve got a message for the White House, we care, and so should you,” he said.

The administra­tion’s decision to separate migrant familes triggered outrage both at home and abroad.

Department of Homeland Security estimated around 2,342 children have been separated from their parents along the border between May 5 and June 6, according to the Washington Post.

Although Trump reversed course on June 20 and signed an executive order to detain families together for an indefinite period, critics said the immigrant families should not be locked up at all.

“(The) family separation crisis is not over. We have a situation where the Trump administra­tion seems to be aiming to detain families,” said Karthik Ganapathy, a MoveOn.org spokesman.

Jessica Variz who clutched a sign that read, “civility upholds white supremacy”, said there is a long list of reasons she came to the protest.

“The current policy of separating families on the border is disgusting and it needs to stop immediatel­y, and we also need to have a policy in place to make sure these families are reunited as soon as possible,” the high school teacher said.

Built on immigrants

In New York, walking across the Brooklyn Bridge, thousands of people held signs with slogans like “Make America Humane Again” and “Immigrants Are Welcome Here”. On the US-Mexico border, demonstrat­ors partially blocked a bridge connecting El Paso, Texas with Ciudad Juarez in Mexico, Reuters reported.

In Chicago, among the thousands who marched toward the offices of federal immigratio­n authoritie­s was Cindy Curry of Westcheste­r, Illinois. “I’m here because families belong together,” said Curry to Reuters.

After an order by a federal judge that families should be reunited, the Trump administra­tion asked the military to house immigrant families, which made the Pentagon consider the constructi­on of camp facilities.

“This country is built on immigrants, that’s where our strength comes from. When our president violates that, we all need to get out in the streets and protest and change that immediatel­y,” a female protester who identified herself as Scheiner told Xinhua News Agency.

“Immigrants are the backbone of this country ... the minute we turn away immigrants, we weaken ourselves,” she said.

While US President Donald Trump has signed an executive order ending the policy to separate parents and children at the border, most children haven’t been reunited with their parents, marchers noted.

“This is a very cruel and inhuman attitude that’s dominating American politics now,” Maddy, who took her 18-month-old baby to protest, told Xinhua.

“Children belong in school, belong in the playground, not in cages,” read one protester’s message.

 ?? WANG PING / XINHUA ?? Marchers rally against US immigratio­n law enforcemen­t policies in Chicago on Saturday, one of the many protests taking place across the United States.
WANG PING / XINHUA Marchers rally against US immigratio­n law enforcemen­t policies in Chicago on Saturday, one of the many protests taking place across the United States.
 ?? RICK BOWMER / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Activists including one holding a
RICK BOWMER / ASSOCIATED PRESS Activists including one holding a

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