San Francisco Chronicle

Judge: Come up with asylum plan

- By Julie Watson Julie Watson is an Associated Press writer.

SAN DIEGO — A federal judge on Friday called on the U.S. government and the American Civil Liberties Union to come up with a plan to address the rights of parents and children separated at the U.S.-Mexico border to seek asylum.

The request was made during a hearing a day after U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw extended a freeze on deportatio­ns of recently reunified families, giving a reprieve to hundreds of children and their parents who want to remain in the United States.

Sabraw said “hasty removal of these children and their parents at the expense of an ordered process provided by law” would go against the public’s interest and deprive the minors of their right to seek asylum.

During Friday’s hearing, Sabraw asked the two sides to come to an agreement over whether some parents who were deported without their children should be returned to the U.S. to pursue asylum with the minors.

Lee Gelernt, an ACLU attorney representi­ng separated families, said some deported parents should be allowed to return to accompany their children through the asylum process. He told the judge others should be let back in because they were misled into believing that if they agreed to be deported, they would be reunited with their children.

As many as 366 parents who were deported to their homelands have not yet been reunited with their children. Sabraw asked the government to provide a detailed report next week on the progress of its efforts to reunify those families.

The government has opposed delaying deportatio­ns, saying parents waived the rights of their children to pursue asylum claims after the adults signed deportatio­n forms.

The order to extend the freeze, which Sabraw first put in place July 16, affects many of the more than 2,500 children who were separated from their parents.

Sabraw said claims of people persecuted in their homelands should at least be heard as they seek asylum. Many families have said they were fleeing violence in their home countries in Central America and planned to seek asylum.

“The court is upholding the rights provided to all persons under the United States Constituti­on, rights that are particular­ly important to minor children seeking refuge through asylum,” Sabraw wrote.

The government so far has reunified at least 2,089 children with their parents or others, including sponsors. Nearly 600 were still separated.

 ?? Jacquelyn Martin / Associated Press ?? Demonstrat­ors gather last month in Washington to protest the separation of immigrant families.
Jacquelyn Martin / Associated Press Demonstrat­ors gather last month in Washington to protest the separation of immigrant families.

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