Democrats
urge Obama to end roundup of Central American migrants
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[January 09, 2016]
By Richard Cowan and Fiona Ortiz
WASHINGTON/CHICAGO (Reuters) - Democrats
in the U.S. Congress, outraged over the Obama administration's pursuit
of Central American migrant families for deportation, on Friday called
for a halt and new protections for undocumented people from three
crime-infested countries.
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Members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus said they want
"temporary protective status" for undocumented migrants from El
Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala. They argue that high murder rates
and gang violence there pushed thousands, including families and
children traveling alone, to seek U.S. refuge.
The recent crackdown, by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security,
was an expansion from mostly targeting individuals to pursuing
families with undocumented members.
Some immigration groups viewed the policy as sending a message to
Central Americans, amid a spike in their arrivals at the
southwestern U.S. border, not to make the journey.
House Democrats denounced Democratic President Barack Obama's policy
at a press conference, urging him to protect, not deport, those
immigrants.
The White House did not signal a willingness to back off.
"We are of course aware of these concerns, but the enforcement
strategy and priorities that the administration has articulated are
not going to change," White House spokesman Joshua Earnest told
reporters.
Hispanic Caucus head Linda Sanchez described women being raped and
murdered, buses being set ablaze and gangs controlling the streets
of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras.
"Deporting these refugees essentially means that we're sending them
back to their home countries to face possible death," she said.
Several House Democratic lawmakers on Thursday met with
administration officials to register their anger over the policy.
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Sanchez told reporters they left the meeting not knowing whether DHS
agents will continue targeting Central American families for
deportation. They have asked to meet in person with Obama.
DHS has confirmed authorities took 121 people into custody over the
weekend.
More than 10,000 people could be subject to deportation under the
DHS initiative, according to new figures from the Executive Office
for Immigration Review. Nearly all are unaccompanied minors.
Seventy-five percent of deportation orders were issued in absentia
because the immigrant did not attend a hearing. Activists say that
indicates many have not gotten adequate legal aid, as immigrants
attending hearings and fighting their cases in court have mostly
avoided deportation.
"Unfortunately there are removal orders for people who had bad legal
representation or poor legal representation," said Claudia
Valenzuela, director of Chicago's Detention Project at the National
Immigrant Justice Center.
(Reporting By Richard Cowan in Washington and Fiona Ortiz in
Chicago; editing by Steve Orlofsky and Tom Brown)
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