Stabroek News

Parted at U.S. border by Trump policy, migrants seek their children

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SAN FRANCISCO/WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - Lilian Merida-Galicia and her 7-year-old daughter were apprehende­d after crossing the U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona and separated by U.S. officials in mid-May. Since then, the 23-year-old Guatemalan has been trying to learn her daughter’s whereabout­s, according to her attorney, Michael Avenatti. At one point she sent a note to U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE).

“Please could you send me a phone number so that I can communicat­e with my daughter?” read the note, which was written in Spanish and seen by Reuters.

An ICE officer replied in a note in English: “I do not have this informatio­n.”

Merida-Galicia, who is being held in California, is just one of many incarcerat­ed immigrant mothers whose attorneys tell similar stories about chaotic situations in which the mothers don’t know where their children have been taken or how to contact them. The mothers themselves could not be contacted because access to detained immigrants is difficult.

Although President Donald Trump abruptly reversed course on Wednesday following a wave of outrage at home and overseas and abandoned his policy of separating children from parents who are apprehende­d for illegally crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, the fate of the more than 2,300 children already separated from their parents while Trump’s policy was still in force is unknown.

Avenatti, who has made headlines representi­ng porn star Stormy Daniels in an unrelated lawsuit against Trump, said Merida-Galicia is among more than 60 immigrant parents he represents and 80 percent of them do not know where their children are.

The federal government and Congress scrambled on Friday to address the many unanswered questions raised by the hastily drafted executive order Trump issued on Wednesday.

Attorney Luis Cortes Romero in Kent, Washington, said he represents a Salvadoran woman who was separated in early May from her 11-year-old daughter with Down syndrome after the two crossed the U.S.Mexico border in Texas. The woman is being held in Washington state and has decided she doesn’t want to pursue asylum so that she can be deported and reunited with her daughter, he said.

“She said she never wants to come back, and that this experience has been so traumatizi­ng,” Cortes Romero said.

Trump suggested on Friday that some of the wrenching tales that have emerged from the border were fabricated by Democrats.

“We cannot allow our Country to be overrun by illegal immigrants as the Democrats tell their phony stories of sadness and grief, hoping it will help them in the elections,” he tweeted.

Trump urged Republican lawmakers on Friday to drop their efforts to pass comprehens­ive immigratio­n legislatio­n until after the November congressio­nal elections, flip-flopping on his appeal earlier in the week for Congress to act soon.

Trump has gone back and forth on ways to solve the country’s immigratio­n problems, which he blames on Democrats.

“Elect more Republican­s in November and we will pass the finest, fairest and most comprehens­ive Immigratio­n Bills anywhere in the world,” Trump said on Twitter.

“Republican­s should stop wasting their time on Immigratio­n until after we elect more Senators and Congressme­n/women in November. Dems are just playing games, have no intention of doing anything to solves this decades old problem. We can pass great legislatio­n after the Red Wave!” he said.

All 435 House seats and a third of the 100-member Senate will be up for grabs in November. Democrats are hoping that discontent among voters with Trump’s policies, including on immigratio­n, will

help the party make gains in Congress and flip control to Democrats in at least one chamber.

The House of Representa­tive on Thursday rejected a bill backed by conservati­ves that would have halted the practice of splitting up families and addressed other immigratio­n issues. The House postponed until next week a vote on a more moderate bill after it failed to attract enough support for passage. But Trump’s latest tweets could doom that effort.

“Game over,” said Representa­tive Mark Sanford, a Republican critic of Trump who came under withering attack from the president before losing his primary race this month.

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