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		U.S. arrests religious leaders, activists 
		at border protest 
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		 [December 11, 2018] 
		By Marty Graham 
 SAN DIEGO (Reuters) - Kneeling in front of 
		riot police, 32 religious leaders and activists were arrested at the 
		U.S. border fence in San Diego on Monday during a protest to support the 
		Central American migrant caravan.
 
 More than 400 demonstrators, many leaders of churches, mosques, 
		synagogues and indigenous communities, sought a halt to detention and 
		deportation of migrants and for the United States to welcome the caravan 
		that arrived in Tijuana, Mexico in November.
 
 Singing and praying, religious leaders moved forward in lines of four to 
		six, some wearing T-shirts reading, "Love Knows No Borders." They were 
		handcuffed and led away by federal agents upon entering a restricted 
		area in front of the fence.
 
 "As a Quaker who believes in our shared humanity...We’re calling on the 
		U.S. to respect the rights of migrants," said Joyce Ajlouny, general 
		secretary of the American Friends Service Committee, which has run a 
		week of actions to back migrants.
 
 
		
		 
		U.S. Border Patrol spokesman Theron Francisco said 31 people were 
		arrested by Federal Protective Services for trespassing and one was 
		arrested by Border Patrol for assaulting an agent.
 
 The arrests marked the second confrontation with U.S. authorities since 
		the caravan reached Tijuana. U.S. Border Patrol agents fired tear gas at 
		migrants on Nov. 25 after they said they had stones thrown at them.
 
 Thousands of migrants are living in crowded shelters and encampments in 
		Tijuana after traveling from Central America to escape poverty and 
		violence. They may have to wait weeks or months to claim asylum at the 
		U.S. border.
 
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			A police officer and a U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) 
			official detain people during a gathering in support of the migrant 
			caravan in San Diego, U.S., close to the border wall between the 
			United States and Mexico, as seen from Tijuana, Mexico December 10, 
			2018. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem 
            
 
            Data released on Monday by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) 
			showed asylum claims at the U.S.-Mexico border rose 67 percent in 
			the 2018 fiscal year from a year earlier.
 U.S. immigration officials say these claims, most of which are 
			accepted, exploit a legal loophole allowing migrants to enter the 
			United States while they await a court hearing on their asylum case.
 
 "As the majority of these claims will not be successful when they 
			are adjudicated by an immigration court, we need Congress to act to 
			address these vulnerabilities," CBP Commissioner Kevin McAleenan 
			said in a statement.
 
 Protest leaders said President Donald Trump had portrayed the 
			caravan as a security threat to advance his "anti-immigrant" agenda 
			and further restrict migrants' ability to seek asylum.
 
 A U.S. judge in November blocked Trump's proclamation to bar 
			migrants who cross the U.S.-Mexico border illegally from seeking 
			asylum.
 
 (Reporting by Marty Graham; Additional reporting by Andrew Hay in 
			New Mexico; Editing Lisa Shumaker and Clarence Fernandez)
 
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