The Mercury News

Don’t look away — the horrors at the border are still happening

- By Esther J. Cepeda Esther J. Cepeda is a Washington Post columnist.

CHICAGO » Lest we forget, inhumanity and injustice continue unabated at the U.s.-mexico border.

The topic of these horrors seems to have been left for dead because of the focus on a potential presidenti­al impeachmen­t, the 2020 election and, well, life.

It is human nature to attempt to go on even in the face of widespread suffering. All over the country, people are getting excited for Halloween — even those children who are scarred from having been separated from their parents at the border, and kids who are in this country illegally and endure teasing about it at school.

Yes, even young adults who have no idea how long it will be before life as they’ve known it will evaporate are wondering what sort of fantasy and dress-up motif to indulge in for a few hours of release from their worries. They will try to forget that they could be sent back to a country at any time that they, for all intents and purposes, don’t even remember.

In turn, those who are free from such pressing anxieties must do their part to not forget that there are millions of people who need us to remember their anguish. This includes people both here in the U.S. — our friends, neighbors and co-workers — and the desperate souls at the border seeking entry.

Here’s a short rundown of what’s going on:

• Late last month, a federal court upheld protection­s for immigrant children kept in detention, reinforcin­g the so-called

Flores Settlement Agreement, which says that children should be held in immigratio­n custody for no more than 20 days. And the ruling maintains the requiremen­t that facilities holding children make every effort to address opportunit­ies for kids to be released to responsibl­e adults.

• Also in September, a federal court blocked the expansion of an “expedited removal” program. This would have allowed the government to deport people without such basic due process procedures as getting to speak with an attorney or presenting evidence in their own defense.

• Last week, the Trump administra­tion backed down on its strategy to levy six-figure fines on immigrants seeking sanctuary in holy spaces like churches and mosques. It was an intimidati­on tactic that never stood a chance, because it relies on extracting huge sums of money from people who are basically peasants living in monastic conditions as an alternativ­e to being deported to a country where they fear imminent starvation or violent death.

Those were the bright spots. Now on to the egregious happenings of late:

• A new lawsuit underscore­s the corruption in America’s deportatio­n apparatus. A woman from Honduras who was living in Connecticu­t unlawfully was allegedly threatened with deportatio­n and death by an immigratio­n agent who, the woman said, sexually assaulted her for several years, impregnate­d her three times and paid for an abortion. The lawsuit names the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Immigratio­n

and Customs Enforcemen­t and a former ICE agent.

• The Trump administra­tion has new plans to take DNA samples from the hundreds of thousands of people living in detention centers without their consent. The Justice Department says this will help solve crimes, but where does the use of mass surveillan­ce tools and involuntar­y capture of biometric data stop?

• Lastly, more walls have captured President Trump’s imaginatio­n. During a speech on Thursday in Pittsburgh, he told his adoring admirers: “And we’re building a wall on the border of New Mexico. And we’re building a wall in Colorado. We’re building a beautiful wall. A big one that really works — that you can’t get over, you can’t get under.” Trump later tweeted that his reference to a Colorado wall — hundreds of miles from the U.s-mexico border — was made “kiddingly.”

Sure, you could just shrug your shoulders if none of these situations directly affects you. But civil liberties have a way of being eroded when no one’s watching. And it’s a short hop from how the Trump administra­tion treats immigrants to how it could decide to treat foreign-born U.S. citizens and, then, U.s.-born citizens.

There are still children living in prison-like conditions at the border, if not in literal metal cages. There are still constituti­onal violations of migrants’ rights and other horrors that require our sustained attention and anger — all the way into November 2020.

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