Los Angeles Times

Taking kids from their parents

- Ou have to

Ygive the Trump administra­tion credit for one thing — persistenc­e in violating basic standards of human decency in its approach to immigratio­n. It was bad enough that the administra­tion had separated more than 700 children from their parents at the border since October. Many if not most of those families were seeking asylum in the United States.

Then, in recent weeks, the administra­tion adopted a new, even harsher tactic. It said it would now begin charging “100%” of people crossing the southern border illegally with criminal violations — and if they came in with children, those children would be taken from them and handed over to the care of the Department of Health and Human Services. That so-called zero-tolerance policy seems certain to dramatical­ly increase the number of children being removed from their families.

“If you are smuggling a child, then we will prosecute you and that child will be separated from you as required by law,” Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions said.

Sessions and Thomas Homan, deputy director of Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, have tried to pass the new policy off as an effort to combat “human traffickin­g,” rather than as a cruel and cynical deterrent to would-be immigrants and asylum seekers. But that explanatio­n doesn’t hold up; indeed, White House Chief of Staff John F. Kelly was more honest when he told NPR two weeks ago that family separation “would be a tough deterrent.”

The president, of course, has tried once again to confuse the issue by tweeting misinforma­tion. He urged his followers to “put pressure on the Democrats to end the horrible law that separates children from there [sic] parents once they cross the Border into the U.S.” But there is no such law. It is true that, as a matter of policy, children are being separated from their undocument­ed parents. But this is entirely the result of the Trump administra­tion’s new zero-tolerance policy in charging all border crossers with a crime. It is not a law, and is certainly not something done by the Democrats.

Human rights advocates say that the policy of separating families is inhumane and may even constitute torture of the separated children.

The hard-line move is part and parcel of the administra­tion’s obsessive fixation on illegal immigratio­n, and its desire to admit even fewer legal immigrants and refugees than under previous administra­tions. In the first year of Trump’s administra­tion, fewer family-based immigratio­n visas were issued than at any other time in the previous decade, according to Reuters. Trump also has severely reduced the number of refugees to be resettled here, from 110,000 in Obama’s final year to 45,000 this year.

Throttling back legal immigratio­n is not in the nation’s long-term interests, though the system has been in dire need of comprehens­ive reform for years — something Congress has failed to do. Trump pays lip service to reforms, but his real aim is to build a wall along the Mexican border and deport many of the people living in the U.S. illegally, no matter how long they have been here, no matter how many American citizen children they have nor any other extenuatin­g circumstan­ces.

As a matter of policy, the government should not be turning a deaf ear to those who arrive at the border in fear of their lives who are asking for protection. Not all have a credible argument to make, but the government has a system in place for handling such requests, even though the Trump administra­tion quietly tightened up the criteria that screening officers are to use to determine whether an asylum seeker has displayed a “credible fear.” In any case, the government should not be charging people with a crime because they asked for help.

We disagree with most of the president’s views on immigratio­n and immigratio­n enforcemen­t, which admittedly are divisive issues that have been nettlesome to solve. But separating children — including babies and toddlers — from their parents when those parents have not been accused of neglect or endangerme­nt should be recognized as a manifestly inhumane practice. Even by an administra­tion as heartless as this one.

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