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Trump's anti-immigration policy: Wailing picture of 2-year-old girl has left entire country divided

Nearly 2000 immigrants were separated from their parents.

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Central American asylum seekers, including a Honduran girl, 2, and her mother, are taken into custody near the U.S.-Mexico border on June 12, 2018 in McAllen, Texas.
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A two-year-old Honduran girl being separated from her mother, crying as her mother is being searched has become the iconic image of US President Donald Trump’s tough take on immigration.

The girl, along with her mother, had rafted across Rio Grande and were stopped in Texas by US Patrol Border agents last week. Agents searched people before taking them in vans to a processing centre.

The photographer who took the picture told CNN: “One of the last people to get on the bus was the mother of this child and her daughter together. And when they went to body-search (the mother) against the vehicle, they asked her to put down her child. And right then, in that moment, the little girl broke into tears. It's not unusual for toddlers in any circumstance to have separation anxiety. But I think this particular situation with the separation of families leads and gives a new meaning to that phrase."

Opinion: Trump's immigration policy is counter-productive 

Nearly 2000 immigrants were separated from their parents in the last six weeks in April and May, according to Homeland Security. The Trump admin has talked tough on prosecuting everyone who has crossed illegally, including those who claim to deserve asylum or have small children.

US Customs and Border Protection later said that the young girl and her mother weren’t separated.The hard policy on immigration seekers has come in from criticism from across the spectrum with former first lady Laura Bush called the separation of children ‘cruel and immoral’.

Meanwhile, the Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nieslen said: “Our policy is if you break the law, we will prosecute you.  You have an option to go to a port of entry and not illegally cross into our country."The picture of the young girl crying has been circulated far and wide and lays bare the change in American politics and how it’s viewed across the world

For long, the image of America was that of the Promised Land. The idea of America as a biblical shining city on the top of the hill as described in Matthew 5:14 is a phrase whose imagery has been used by numerous POTUSes including JFK, Reagan, Bush and Obama and Trump’s rival Marco Rubio who had used it to denounce Trump.

Trump on the other hand is pretty clear that the shining city is not opening its doors in the grand tradition of Christian charity.

Widespread condemnation

 

The UN rights chief condemned the "unconscionable" separation of migrant children from their parents at the US border, as First Lady Melania Trump made a rare political plea to end the deeply controversial practice.
The "zero-tolerance" border security policy implemented by President Donald Trump's administration has sparked tears among migrant families and outrage on both sides of the political aisle.
 

"The thought that any state would seek to deter parents by inflicting such abuse on children is unconscionable," Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein said as he opened a session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.

He called for Washington to immediately end the practice of "forcible separation of these children." Democrats, meanwhile, stepped up their opposition to the policy, describing it as "evil." "They call it 'zero tolerance,' but a better name for it is zero humanity, and there's zero logic to this policy," said Senator Jeff Merkley of Oregon, after leading a group of Democratic lawmakers to the Mexican border.

They toured a converted Walmart supermarket that is now housing about 1,500 immigrant children, after which Merkley said "hurting kids to get legislative leverage is unacceptable. It is evil." Bracing for more child arrivals, the government plans to build camps at military bases in Texas.

Authorities said that during one recent six-week period nearly 2,000 minors were separated from their parents or adult guardians -- a figure that only stoked the firestorm.

Trump has said he wants the separations to end, but continues to blame opposition Democrats for the crisis, which critics say is of his own making.
Amid deep divisions, congressional Republicans have struggled to craft a viable immigration plan.

Trump's wife, who seldom wades into the political arena, opted to call for bipartisan immigration reform to fix the issue, rather than denounce the policy.
"Mrs Trump hates to see children separated from their families and hopes both sides of the aisle can finally come together to achieve successful immigration reform," her spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham said.

"She believes we need to be a country that follows all laws, but also a country that governs with heart." The president himself later tweeted: "The Democrats should get together with their Republican counterparts and work something out on Border Security & Safety. Don't wait until after the election because you are going to lose!" Immigration is one of the most divisive issues roiling American politics.

The number of separations has jumped since early May, when Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced that all migrants illegally crossing the US border with Mexico would be arrested, regardless of whether the adults were seeking asylum.

Since children cannot be sent to the facilities where their parents are held, they are separated, which the American Academy of Pediatrics has warned causes "irreparable harm" to the children.

One Honduran asylum seeker killed himself in detention after US authorities separated him from his wife and three-year-old son last month, The Washington Post reported.

Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen insisted that "we do not have a policy of separating families at the border. Period." "For those seeking asylum at ports of entry, we have continued the policy from previous Administrations and will only separate if the child is in danger, there is no custodial relationship between 'family' members, or if the adult has broken a law," she wrote on Twitter.

Some of Trump's fellow Republicans also have said the policy must end.

The administration has decided "to separate children from their parents to try to send a message that if you cross the border with children, your children are going to be ripped away from you," Senator Susan Collins told CBS television's "Face the Nation." "That's traumatising to the children who are innocent victims, and it is contrary to our values in this country." Laura Bush, the former first lady and wife of Republican ex-president George W Bush, was unflinching in her rejection of the policy.

"I appreciate the need to enforce and protect our international boundaries, but this zero-tolerance policy is cruel. It is immoral. And it breaks my heart," Bush, who lives in Texas, wrote in a Washington Post opinion piece.

Ex-president Bill Clinton, a Democrat, also weighed in.

"These children should not be a negotiating tool. And reuniting them with their families would reaffirm America's belief in & support for all parents who love their children," he tweeted.

In one incident that highlighted the crisis, five immigrants died and several others were injured after a high-speed chase with Border Patrol agents in Texas ended in a crash, US media said.

With inputs from Reuters

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