The Borneo Post

Melania visits border, Congress flails on family separation­s

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MCALLEN, United States: Melania Trump made a surprise trip to the US- Mexican border on Thursday as her husband’s administra­tion seeks to quell a firestorm over migrant family separation­s, while Republican lawmakers were forced to delay a high-stakes vote on the crisis.

While President Donald Trump’s administra­tion struggled to formulate next steps, the Pentagon signaled officials were bracing for a lengthy ordeal. The military said it will prepare to house up to 20,000 unaccompan­ied migrant children on its bases.

The first lady’s unannounce­d visit came a day after the president — in a stunning about-face — moved to end the practice of splitting migrant families, which had prompted outrage at home and abroad.

There was, however, no immediate plan in place to reunite the more than 2,300 children already separated from their families — igniting a fresh controvers­y over the conditions in which the children are living.

In McAllen, Texas, Melania Trump visited the Upbring New Hope Children’s Shelter, a federally- funded facility that

I’m glad I’m here and I’m looking forward to seeing the children. I would also like to ask you how I can help these children to reunite with their families as quickly as possible. Melania Trump, US first lady

houses about 55 children from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador, ages five to 17.

“I’m glad I’m here and I’m looking forward to seeing the children,” Melania said at a roundtable discussion with social workers and government officials.

“I would also like to ask you how I can help these children to reunite with their families as quickly as possible.”

Images and recordings of wailing youngsters detained in processing centers with chainlink cage-like enclosures has ignited global outrage.

The first lady herself had called for a political compromise to end the separation­s — the result of the administra­tion’s ‘zero tolerance’ policy launched in early May, under which illegal border crossers were systematic­ally prosecuted and their children separated from them as a result.

In Washington, lawmakers failed to advance either of two Republican immigratio­n bills in the House of Representa­tives.

A hardline proposal was defeated, as expected.

But a vote on a ‘compromise’ bill between the party’s conservati­ve and moderate wings, which ends family separation­s but also includes Trump priorities like curtailing legal immigratio­n and providing some protection­s to young immigrants, was pushed back to Friday, and then to next week, in a sign there was no immigratio­n consensus within the party that controls Congress.

The failure dealt an embarrassi­ng blow to Republican­s under intense pressure to take legislativ­e steps to address the issue.

The crisis was fueling a brutal partisan scrap, with Trump blaming ‘extremist’ Democrats for refusing to help tighten border security. — AFP

 ??  ?? Melania tours the Lutheran Social Services of the South ‘Upbring New Hope Children’s Centre’ near the US-Mexico border in McAllen Texas, US. — Reuters photo
Melania tours the Lutheran Social Services of the South ‘Upbring New Hope Children’s Centre’ near the US-Mexico border in McAllen Texas, US. — Reuters photo

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