Boston Herald

Trump administra­tion: We know where children are

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Trump administra­tion officials say the U.S. government knows the location of all children in its custody after separating them from their families at the border and is working to reunite them.

A fact sheet on “zero-tolerance prosecutio­n and family reunificat­ion” released Saturday night by the Department of Homeland Security and other agencies involved in the separation­s also says a parent must request that their child be deported with them. In the past, the agency says, many parents elected to be deported without their children. That may be a reflection of violence or persecutio­n they face in their home countries.

The fact sheet doesn’t state how long it might take to reunite families. The Port Isabel Service Processing Center in Texas has been set up as the staging ground for the families to be reunited prior to deportatio­n.

The latest actions come after President Trump’s order last week to stop separating migrant children from their parents. The executive order signed Wednesday immediatel­y spread confusion along the border, with officials sending conflictin­g signals about the state of the administra­tion’s “zero tolerance” policy. Some parents said they did not even know where their children were.

How the government would reunite families has been unclear because the families are first stopped by Customs and Border Patrol, with children taken into custody by the Department of Health and Human Services and adults detained through Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, which is under the Department of Homeland Security. Children have been sent to far-flung shelters around the country, raising alarm that parents might never know where their children can be found.

Bay State U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren tweeted last night about her visit to a Texas detention center.

“Today, I’m in McAllen, TX. What I’ve witnessed here is truly disturbing. People are being held in cages – there’s no other way to describe it. There are children by themselves. Mothers with young babies. They have nothing but the clothes on their backs.

“I spoke with one woman from El Salvador at a CBP processing center. She gave a policeman a drink of water, and the gangs came after her. She sold everything she had and fled with her 4-year-old son because their lives were in danger.

“I believe that when a woman flees the only home she’s ever known with her 4-year-old son and begs the United States of America for asylum, she deserves a fair hearing. I believe that every human being has worth. We must do better.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? CLEARING A PATH: Officers secure the street to allow a bus with immigrant children aboard to move after protesters blocked it.
AP PHOTO CLEARING A PATH: Officers secure the street to allow a bus with immigrant children aboard to move after protesters blocked it.

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