Gulf News

The administra­tion announced on Tuesday that any immigrant in the country illegally who is charged with or convicted of any offence, or even suspected of a crime, will now be an enforcemen­t priority.

- AP

co,” said the 41-year-old Ramos, who with her husband and three children left Ciudad Juarez because of drug violence and death threats in 2008 and entered the US on tourist visas that have since expired. “We wouldn’t have anywhere to return.”

An undocument­ed Guatemalan migrant mother and her son have called an Austin, Texas, church home for more than a year. Hilda Ramirez says they were fleeing the danger of their country and were caught by immigratio­n authoritie­s as they illegally crossed the border at Texas in 2014. After they were released from a holding facility, a pastor allowed them to live on church grounds.

The unease among immigrants has been building but intensifie­d in recent weeks with ever-clearer signs that the Trump administra­tion would jettison the Obama-era policy of focusing mostly on deporting those who had committed serious crimes.

The administra­tion announced on Tuesday that any immigrant in the country illegally who is charged with or convicted of any offence, or even suspected of a crime, will now be an enforcemen­t priority. That could include people arrested for shopliftin­g or other minor offences, or those who simply crossed the border illegally.

Some husbands and wives fear spouses who lack legal papers could be taken away. And many worry that parents will be separated from their US-born children.

Dozens of immigrants have been turning up at an advocacy group’s offices in Philadelph­ia, asking questions like, “Who will take care of my children if I am deported?” They also are coached on how to develop a “deportatio­n plan” that includes the name and number of an attorney and other emergency contacts in case of arrest.

An organisati­on in Austin, Texas, that runs a deportatio­n hotline said it normally would receive one or two calls every few days. After recent immigratio­n raids, the phone rang off the hook.

“We got over 1,000 phone calls in three days about the raids,” said Cristina Parker, immigratio­n programmes director for Grassroots Leadership. “And certainly a lot of those were people who wanted informatio­n about the raids saying, ‘I’m scared, I’m worried, what can I do?’ ... A lot of them were people who were impacted by the raids who saw a friend or family be taken.”

Immigrants in the Chicago area have said they are scared to drive, and some are even wary of taking public transit. When Chicago police and federal authoritie­s conducted regular safety checks on a train line earlier this month, many assumed it was an immigratio­n checkpoint.

Word spread so quickly that Chicago police issued a statement assuring immigrants, “You are welcome here.”

In Arizona, immigrant Abril Gallardo said the policies have prompted new conversati­ons with her parents and siblings. Her father, who’s in the country illegally, made sure all the taillights work in the van he drives to his constructi­on job in the Phoenix area. They look through the window if anyone knocks.

Her brother is getting married this weekend, and immigrant friends were reluctant to drive to the bridal shower.

“We have a regular life, but with this new executive order, anyone, just for the fact that you’re here, you can become a priority,” said Gallardo, 26, who is in the US with permission under the Obama administra­tion policy for people who entered illegally as children.

In the Bronx, Dominguez, a student protected from deportatio­n under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals programme, is looking into what she needs to do to raise her American-born brother and sister if their parents are deported.

When Dominguez goes out, she tells others where she is going, with whom, and when she will be home, and expects the same from her parents. If someone is late getting home, she said, “we start calling.”

Brazil’s

foreign minister resigned from his post Wednesday night, citing undisclose­d medical reasons.

Jose Serra, who was named to the job last May, said in a letter to President Michel Temer that he needed at least four months to recover from a disease he did not identify. He also said he could not travel as much as needed or perform dayto-day work properly as foreign minister.

Serra is a key leader of the centre-right Brazilian Social Democracy Party.

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 ??  ?? Mr. Lane, who did not give his first name, sits at the dining room table as his two children watch a movie in their home in San Diego on Wednesday. The Lane family has been on edge since President Donald Trump took office. The mother, a Mexican who is...
Mr. Lane, who did not give his first name, sits at the dining room table as his two children watch a movie in their home in San Diego on Wednesday. The Lane family has been on edge since President Donald Trump took office. The mother, a Mexican who is...

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