Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

'Zero tolerance' policy doesn't deter crossings

- Esther J. Cepeda Columnist Esther Cepeda is syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group.

Columnist Esher Cepeda writes that people fleeing violence and poverty are willing to take their chances.

In simpler times, the Republican standard bearer thought the humane way to deal with illegal immigratio­n was to worry people into heading back to their home countries.

In 2012, Mitt Romney assured voters that no one wanted to round up unlawfully present immigrants and deport them. He instead wanted them to “self-deport,” and his policies would simply encourage people’s return trip.

That didn’t fly with anyone. So here we are, six years later, and we’ve seen video footage of Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officers stalking neighborho­ods and Border Patrol agents asking people on buses and trains for their “papers.”

We’ve seen children torn from their parents and housed in cages. And we’ve heard reports of jailed parents, not knowing how or whether they’ll reunite with their children, either attempting or committing suicide.

Reports also abound of asylum requests being discourage­d at the border and human rights abuses being inflicted on immigrants in detention centers.

And guess what? It doesn’t appear to have stopped immigrants from taking a one-in-a-million shot at the opportunit­y to be able to eat and live.

The Trump administra­tion’s “zero tolerance” policy “is not deterring asylum-seekers from improperly crossing the U.S.-Mexico border between ports of entry,” according to the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA), a nonprofit advocacy organizati­on based in Washington, D.C.

“The number of border-crossers, including children and families, declined from May to June, but the drop was no steeper than the usual seasonal variation: the hot summer months tend to see fewer migrants,” WOLA reported.

It is inconceiva­ble to many Americans how any responsibl­e parents could consider making the treacherou­s journey across the U.S.-Mexico border with their children.

And most of these skeptics don’t know that, even before traversing this border, migrants from Central America (who make up the largest portion of U.S. border crossers) have made an equally perilous jaunt into Mexico. That is a country in which immigrant advocates proclaim that the government’s treatment of unlawfully present immigrants is a national disgrace.

NPR recently reported that Mexico “has deported more than half a million Central Americans, including almost 82,000 last year, according to data from Mexico’s Interior Department. Since 2015, Mexico has deported more Central Americans annually than U.S. authoritie­s have, in some years more than twice as many.”

It’s no wonder — the violence and lack of economic opportunit­y in those countries is incomprehe­nsible to those familiar with the grinding, but ultimately survivable, poverty in the U.S.

We are complicit in the economic and human rights disasters that are causing migrants to flee their home countries — CNN just reported that the Trump administra­tion was informed that ending the Temporary Protected Status for Central Americans would increase illegal immigratio­n, but they ended it anyway. So let’s not be ignorant about whether the crush of desperate humans at the border will ever subside.

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