The Borneo Post

US judge praises govt on reunificat­ions, demands more

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LOS ANGELES: A federal judge praised the US government Friday for reuniting 1,800 migrant children it took from their families at the Mexican border — but demanded that the focus shift to 400 who remain in custody because their parents have been deported.

Judge Dana Sabraw spoke out a day after it was revealed that hundreds of families had still not been reunited after being split under President Donald Trump’s controvers­ial ‘zero tolerance’ policy against undocument­ed migrants.

Sabraw had ordered that all eligible migrant families be brought back together by 6.00pm Thursday.

Officials said in a court filing that while 1,820 children aged five and older were back with their parents, hundreds remained in custody.

The government insists the deadline has been met, as the families of those remaining are ineligible for a variety of reasons, including unconfirme­d family ties or parents with criminal records.

Sabraw accepted that ‘the process has been completed’ and said the government ‘deserves great credit in this regard’ for making the deadline.

But he insisted that finding the deported parents must be the “the second stage.”

Stage three, said the judge, would be to set up a protocol ensuring that “this never happens again.”

The controvers­ial separation­s began in May, when migrants illegally entering the United States were detained en masse, and their children taken to detention centers and shelters.

Justice Department attorney Scott Stewart told the court there were 1,000 families with ‘executable’ deportatio­n orders — 400 of whom were in custody and would be the first removed.

Many others had been released from custody upon reunificat­ion, he added, but will be subject to deportatio­n as soon as Sabraw lifts a stay on removal proceeding­s.

The American Civil Liberties Union, which brought the lawsuit to reunite the families, says the government is manipulati­ng the figures to give a false impression.

“The Trump administra­tion is trying to sweep them under the rug by unilateral­ly picking and choosing who is eligible for reunificat­ion,” Lee Gelernt, of the ACLU, said in a statement.

“We will continue to hold the government accountabl­e and get these families back together.”

The organisati­on wants reunited families to have a week to decide their next move, whether that be fighting for asylum, agreeing to go but leaving the children, or the whole family leaving together.

Most are from Central America, fleeing gang violence and other turmoil.

The judge, based in San Diego, addressed the eligibilit­y controvers­y by remarking that the government could only reunite children under its control. He postponed ruling on the seven-day delay request.

The separation­s triggered outrage in the US and abroad, especially after the release of audio of small children in shelters crying for their parents.

The pressure led to the Republican president demanding an end to the separation­s in June, six weeks after the ‘zero tolerance’ policy kicked into high gear. — AFP

 ??  ?? An undocument­ed immigrant father from El Salvador and his three-yearold daughter are released from detention with other families at a bus depot in McAllen, Texas, US. — Reuters photo
An undocument­ed immigrant father from El Salvador and his three-yearold daughter are released from detention with other families at a bus depot in McAllen, Texas, US. — Reuters photo

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