Albuquerque Journal

DHS may separate parents, kids at border

Aim is to discourage families from traveling to U.S. border

- BY ALICIA A. CALDWELL ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — The Homeland Security Department is considerin­g separating children from parents caught crossing the Mexican border illegally, Secretary John Kelly said Monday.

Kelly said such a move would be part of a broader effort to discourage families from making the dangerous trek across Mexico to the U.S. border.

He confirmed that he’s considerin­g the action during an interview with CNN Monday.

Tens of thousands of parents and children fleeing violence and poverty, mostly from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, have been caught crossing the border illegally in recent years. Generally, the families are detained for a few days or weeks before being released into the United States to wait for an immigratio­n judge to decide their fate.

“I would do almost anything to deter the people from Central America getting on this very, very dangerous network … going through Mexico,” Kelly said during his television interview.

Homeland Security officials have been trying to curb the flow of families since 2014 when a flood of both children and families overwhelme­d immigratio­n officials. The department launched a public relations campaign in Central America to warn about the dangers and advise families that there would be no free pass into the United States.

The Obama administra­tion opened multiple detention centers that year to house families while immigratio­n judges and asylum officers heard their cases.

But a federal judge in California later ruled that detaining children violated a long-standing agreement that bars the government from detaining children in a jail-like setting, even with their parents. That ruling prompted the government to start releasing families into the U.S.

Kelly said if families are separated at the border, children will be “wellcared for” by government officials.

 ?? BERNARD THOMAS/THE HERALD-SUN ?? A large crowd listens to speakers during a dialogue between officials and refugees and immigrants at a church in Durham, N.C., on Sunday.
BERNARD THOMAS/THE HERALD-SUN A large crowd listens to speakers during a dialogue between officials and refugees and immigrants at a church in Durham, N.C., on Sunday.

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