Iran Daily

US judge approves plan to reunite separated immigrant families

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Afederal judge on Friday approved a plan to reunite hundreds more families who were separated by border officials after they entered the US from Mexico. The plan negotiated by the US government and immigrant rights advocates marked the second stage of federal efforts to reunite 2,551 children ages five to 17 with their parents, Reuters reported.

These families had been separated under President Donald Trump’s now-abandoned ‘zero tolerance’ policy toward illegal immigrants.

As of Thursday, 541 of the children remained separated and under care of the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt, while another 24 under age five also remained in federal care. More than 2,000 children have already been reunited with their parents.

The plan sets out processes to locate parents outside the country, assess their fitness as parents and determine their intentions for their children.

It also includes provisions negotiated this week, including that the government arrange travel for reunited children and not impair their right to seek future asylum.

“The joint proposed plan is approved wholeheart­edly by the court,” US District Judge Dana Sabraw said at a hearing in San Diego attended by US Department of Justice and American Civil Liberties Union lawyers.

Trump abandoned the separation policy on June 20 after widespread criticism at home and internatio­nally.

Sabraw said he would reserve judgment on a disputed issue of whether removed parents could be reunited with their children in the US, instead of their original countries, including parents who may want asylum for their children.

Sabraw has been overseeing the reunificat­ion process since ordering on June 26 that families be reunited.

In a related case, Sabraw on Thursday put an indefinite freeze on deporting families who were separated at the border, including those who have been reunited.

Lawyers for the families had argued that some parents may have unknowingl­y waived their reunificat­ion rights, and that children have a right to their parents’ help in seeking asylum.

Sabraw, who was appointed to the bench by the 43rd president of the US George W. Bush, on Friday acknowledg­ed the challenges in efficientl­y bringing parents and children back together.

“This is an enormous undertakin­g involving a situation of the government’s own making, but we will never be able to come up with a process that is perfect or restores all rights, as if this incident never happened,” he said.

“All we can do is the best we can do under the present circumstan­ces.”

 ??  ?? ADREES LATIF/REUTERS Men from Honduras and Mexico place their hands on a Border Patrol vehicle after they were apprehende­d for illegally crossing into the US border from Mexico in Los Ebanos, Texas, the US, on August 16, 2018.
ADREES LATIF/REUTERS Men from Honduras and Mexico place their hands on a Border Patrol vehicle after they were apprehende­d for illegally crossing into the US border from Mexico in Los Ebanos, Texas, the US, on August 16, 2018.
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