Bangkok Post

Millions targeted in deportatio­n plan

US administra­tion issues crackdown

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WASHINGTON: The Trump administra­tion issued tough new orders on Tuesday for a sweeping crackdown on illegal immigrants, putting nearly all of the country’s 11 million undocument­ed foreigners in its crosshairs.

The orders sent shivers through US immigrant communitie­s, where millions of people who have spent years building families and livelihood­s in the country, most of them from Mexico and Central America, were seriously threatened with deportatio­n for the first time in decades.

Rights groups labelled the move a “witch hunt”, warning that mass deportatio­ns would damage families with deep roots in the United States and hurt the economy.

But John Kelly, the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) who issued the new orders in two memos, said they were necessary to address a problem that has “overwhelme­d” government resources.

“The surge of illegal immigratio­n at the southern border has overwhelme­d federal agencies and resources and has created a significan­t national security vulnerabil­ity to the United States,” he said in one of the memos.

Senator Ben Cardin, the top Democrat of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, warned the new guidelines will “harm national security and public safety”.

New York Mayor Bill De Blasio said he refused to turn the city’s police officers into immigratio­n agents or its jails into “holding pens for deportatio­n policy that will only undermine the inclusiven­ess that has helped make New York city the safest big city in the nation”. The new rules make it easier for border patrol and immigratio­n officers to quickly deport any illegal immigrants they find, with only a few exceptions, principall­y children.

The priority will remain undocument­ed immigrants convicted of crimes, as well as anyone who has been charged or potentiall­y faces criminal charges.

However, people deemed as low priority for deportatio­n by the previous administra­tion of Barack Obama — generally anyone not tied to a crime — are no longer protected.

“With extremely limited exceptions, DHS will not exempt classes or categories of removal aliens from potential enforcemen­t,” the memos said.

“All of those in violation of the immigratio­n laws may be subject to enforcemen­t proceeding­s, up to and including removal from the United States.”

The memos followed up on President Donald Trump’s order, issued just after his January 20 inaugurati­on, for authoritie­s to crack down on illegal immigratio­n by tightening enforcemen­t and building a wall along the nearly 3,145km US-Mexico frontier.

In the memos, Mr Kelly ordered immediate action to begin planning the wall. He also ordered the hiring of 15,000 more officers for the Customs and Border Protection and Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agencies.

The move comes ahead of meetings this week between Mr Kelly and US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto in Mexico, in which illegal immigratio­n and border security will be key topics.

The turn in policy follows years during which the Obama and George W Bush administra­tions sought to find a way with Congress to allow most of the long-term illegal immigrants to stay in the country. But Mr Trump campaigned for the White House on a promise to crack down on what he characteri­sed as a source of widespread crime and a drag on the economy.

White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Mr Trump “wanted to take the shackles off” officials enforcing the laws.

DHS said there are more than 534,000 pending immigratio­n cases in the courts nationwide and that agents have apprehende­d more than 93,000 people trying to sneak into the country in October and November alone.

That work “has significan­tly strained DHS resources”, it said.

While Mr Spicer said the policy could evolve beyond the DHS memos, there was no indication of what form those changes could take.

Pro-immigrant groups, already nervous after hundreds were arrested in a series of ICE raids on immigrant “sanctuary cities” two weeks ago, expressed shock and outrage.

At the Statue of Liberty in New York a banner reading “refugees welcome” was unfurled.

“Secretary Kelly has unleashed an unpreceden­ted witch hunt on millions of immigrant families,” said Angelica Salas, executive director for the Los Angelesbas­ed Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights. “These guidelines represent an unlawful, expedited process, a dragnet, to remove undocument­ed immigrants living and working in the US. This is a dastardly approach to a very human issue.”

Omar Jadwat, director of the Immigrants’ Rights Project at the American Civil Liberties Union, predicted strong legal challenges to the new policy.

“These memos confirm that the Trump administra­tion is willing to trample on due process, human decency, the well-being of our communitie­s and even protection­s for vulnerable children in pursuit of a hyperaggre­ssive mass deportatio­n policy,” he said.

 ?? AP ?? Women pray as two men check a flag during a rally in support of Muslim Americans and protest against President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n policies in Times Square, New York, on Sunday.
AP Women pray as two men check a flag during a rally in support of Muslim Americans and protest against President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n policies in Times Square, New York, on Sunday.

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