USA TODAY International Edition

Trump’s policy sparks outrage in Central American nations

Most families have been fleeing violence at home

- Erin Kelly

WASHINGTON – The Trump administra­tion’s “zero tolerance” immigratio­n policy – which has separated more than 2,000 children from their parents as they crossed the U.S.-Mexico border – has sparked outrage in the Central American countries most of the immigrants are fleeing.

In Honduras, La Prensa newspaper featured a political cartoon Thursday with the title “Nation of Immigrants” that showed the Statue of Liberty using her flame to burn an immigrant. A frontpage story earlier in the week proclaimed “Separation of Families is Cruel and Inhumane.”

In El Salvador on Friday, the No.1 most-viewed story in La Prensa Grafica was about the Time magazine cover depicting President Donald Trump looking down on a crying 2-year-old girl, with the headline “Welcome to America.”

In Guatemala, an editorial in La Hora newspaper denounced the “xenophobia” of the Trump administra­tion.

“Trump has called our people rapists, criminals, drug dealers and gangsters, among other things,” an editorial said.

And in Mexico, the newspaper El Universal said: “The United States treats migrant children as Taliban” – a reference to the Afghan terrorist group.

The presidents of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador have all condemned the U.S. policy.

“When a policy ... ends up in the separation of the family and in the pain of so many human beings, especially children, not only must it be revised, it must be corrected as soon as possible,” Guatemalan President Jimmy Morales said on his Facebook page last week.

Immigrants from the three Central American nations have been fleeing their homelands because of high murder rates and widespread violence by gangs and drug cartels.

Central American leaders generally praised Trump’s announceme­nt Wednesday that U.S. officials would no longer separate children from their families, but they wanted to know more details about what would happen to the more than 2,000 children already separated from their parents. It’s not clear when or if all those children will be reunited with their mothers and fathers.

“El Salvador receives positively the signature of this executive order, but it is important to define the measures that will be applied to promote the reunificat­ion of the girls, boys and adolescent­s who were already separated from their families,” the Salvadoran government said in a press release Thursday.

The children were taken away from their parents after the adults were referred for prosecutio­n on federal misdemeano­r charges of entering the U.S. illegally. The separation­s resulted from a “zero tolerance” policy on illegal immigratio­n that Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced in early April.

The leading candidate for president of Mexico, Andres Manuel Lopez, said at a rally last week that Trump’s reversal on family separation­s was “wise.”

“It’s good to hear because it was a racist and inhumane measure,” he said. “It’s always wise to change your mind, especially on humanitari­an issues.”

 ?? ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES ?? Children wrap themselves in Mylar blankets to represent kids separated from their families, during a protest Thursday on Capitol Hill.
ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES Children wrap themselves in Mylar blankets to represent kids separated from their families, during a protest Thursday on Capitol Hill.

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