New York Daily News

TRUMP PUSHES NEW LIMITS ON IMMIGS

VOWS TO DENY ASYLUM TO MANY

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

President Trump announced Thursday that his administra­tion will only allow migrants to apply for asylum if they make their claims at U.S. ports of entry, prompting widespread rebuke from immigratio­n advocates who say he's playing politics with people's lives.

The announceme­nt flies in the face of U.S. and internatio­nal law, which lets migrants fleeing war, violence, racial, religious, social or political prosecutio­n petition for asylum regardless of where they cross the border.

The reversal, which Trump said will be implemente­d via executive order next week, comes as the President wages an aggressive and fear-mongering campaign to keep a slowmoving, U.S.-bound caravan of Central American migrants in the headlines ahead of next week's midterm elections.

“Under this plan the illegal aliens will no longer get a free pass into our country by lodging meritless claims in seeking asylum,” Trump said at the White House — without providing any evidence to back up the existence of such fraudulent applicatio­ns.

“Instead, migrants seeking asylum will have to present themselves lawfully at a port of entry,” Trump said. “Those who choose to break our laws and enter illegally will no longer be able to use meritless claims in order to gain automatic admission into our country.”

Trump has also deployed more than 5,000 armed U.S. troops to the border and said Wednesday he may bump that number to 15,000. The caravan comprises less than 3,500 people and active-duty service members are prohibited by law from detaining or searching migrants.

In what critics saw as a disturbing call for violence, Trump intimated during his prepared remarks that he had instructed the deployed soldiers to shoot unarmed migrants if they throw rocks.

“Anybody throwing stones, rocks...we will consider that a firearm,” Trump said when asked about the use of fire power at the border. “Because there's not much difference.”

Trump's expected executive order on the matter will almost certainly face court challenges — but the President contended it will be “totally legal.”

“This is an invasion,” Trump said, referring to the caravan, which is mainly made up of families and children hoping to apply for asylum and fleeing vi-

olence and poverty.

Even though the caravan is nearly 1,000 miles away and isn’t expected to reach U.S. territory for several more weeks, Trump claimed the migrants are “rushing the border.”

Any migrants who cross the border illegally will be detained in “massive tent cities,” Trump said.

“We are not releasing them int our country any more,” the president said. “We have thousands of tents.”

Omar Jadwat, the director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s immigrants’ rights project, argued Trump’s proposal is illegal and speculated he only made it to curry favor with his most conservati­ve supporters ahead of the midterms.

“The law is clear: you can apply for asylum at a port of entry or not at a port of entry regardless of what your status is,” Jadwat told the Daily News in a phone interview, referring to the Refugee Act passed by Congress in 1980.

Jadwat found Trump’s announceme­nt all the more troubling because his administra­tion faces a lawsuit that says it has been turning away credible asylum seekers at legal ports of entry.

“They’re essentiall­y trying to make it impossible,” Jadwat said of the administra­tion’s attempt to curtail asylum law. “Real people’s lives are involved here. Real claims from real people who are fleeing very real persecutio­n and poverty. People’s lives are certainly going to be on the line.”

Some migrants allegedly refused at ports of entry, have tried entering the U.S. in unguarded areas, turning themselves over to border agents, and then making asylum claims. If Trump’s latest proposal materializ­es, that option would be annulled.

Frank Sharry, the executive director of immigratio­n advocacy group America’s Voice, saw Trump’s announceme­nt as an attempt to distract from more dire domestic issues.

“Trump and the Republican Party are so desperate to change the subject from the heinous murder of eleven American Jews in their place of worship and the GOP’s terrible record on healthcare and taxes, the President is calling a group of Central Americans fleeing violence and seeking safety a threat to national security,” Sharry said.

“It seems he wants the strongest nation on earth, a nation once known as the City on the Hill, to cower in fear. Ironically, the people walking towards our country still believe in the promise of America.”

 ??  ?? Ragtag group of men, women and children, still hundreds of miles from the U.S. border (photos below) have stirred President Trump’s efforts to remake immigratio n law. He has vowed to limit how people in fear for their lives in their homelands can gain asylum, and to detain anyone who crosses into the U.S. illegally in massive tent cities.
Ragtag group of men, women and children, still hundreds of miles from the U.S. border (photos below) have stirred President Trump’s efforts to remake immigratio n law. He has vowed to limit how people in fear for their lives in their homelands can gain asylum, and to detain anyone who crosses into the U.S. illegally in massive tent cities.
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