Protesters across U.S. call on Trump to
reunite immigrant families
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[July 02, 2018]
By Lesley Wroughton and Jason Lange
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of
protesters marched in cities across the United States on Saturday to
demand the Trump administration reverse an immigration crackdown that
has separated children from parents at the U.S-Mexico border and led to
plans for military-run detention camps.
Outside the White House, protesters waved "Families Belong Together"
signs and chanted "Shame!" as religious leaders and activists urged the
administration to be more welcoming of foreigners and to reunite
families.
"The way they treat families, the way they treat immigrants, that's not
America," said protester Aneice Germain of President Donald Trump's
tough stance on immigration, a cornerstone of his 2016 election campaign
and his presidency. Trump was out of town at a golf club he owns in
Bedminster, New Jersey.
Trump says illegal immigration fosters crime and he implemented a "zero
tolerance" policy in May to prosecute all immigrants apprehended for
entering illegally. That led to the separation of more than 2,000
children from their parents, causing an outcry this month, even from
some allies of the Republican president.
In a rare retreat on an issue that fires up his conservative base, Trump
on June 20 ordered officials to detain families together.
Thousands of protesters in New York marched across the Brooklyn Bridge
bearing signs with slogans like "Make America Humane Again" and
"Immigrants Are Welcome Here." On the U.S.-Mexico border, demonstrators
partially blocked a bridge connecting El Paso, Texas with Ciudad Juarez
in Mexico.
In Chicago, thousands gathered to march toward the offices of federal
immigration authorities. "I’m here because families belong together,"
said Cindy Curry of Westchester, Illinois.A federal judge has ordered
families be reunited and the administration asked the military to house
immigrant families, leading the Pentagon to mull the construction of
soft-sided camp facilities.
Organizers estimated 30,000 people had gathered in central Washington.
The peaceful protest appeared to be the largest pro-immigration
demonstration in the U.S. capital since at least 2010, when activists
rallied to pressure then-President Barack Obama and Congress to overhaul
the U.S. immigration system.
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Demonstrators protest in front of the Metropolitan Detention Center,
Federal Bureau of Prisons, during a national day of action called
"Keep Families Together" against the Trump administration's 'Zero
Tolerance' policy in Los Angeles, California, U.S. June 30, 2018.
REUTERS/Monica Almeida
A splinter group of several dozen protesters in Washington went to
protest at what they said was the residence of Stephen Miller, a
White House adviser known for his hardline views on immigration. It
was the latest in a string of public protests against Trump
administration officials.
They held up a sign saying "Stephen Miller, We Know Where You
Sleep."
Since taking office in 2017, Trump has overseen an increase in
arrests of people suspected of being in the country illegally. His
administration is also approving fewer family visas.
Immigration has been on the rise in America and across much of the
developed world for decades, roiling politics in recent years in
Germany, Britain and the United States.
Immigrants made up about one in 20 U.S. residents in 1970. By 2016,
their share rose to about one in seven, according the U.S. Census
Bureau.
On Twitter on Saturday, Trump criticized the handful of Democratic
politicians who have called for the U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement agency known as ICE to be eliminated.
"You are doing a fantastic job of keeping us safe by eradicating the
worst criminal elements," he wrote in part of the post addressed to
ICE employees.
(Reporting by Lesley Wroughton and Jason Lange; additional reporting
by Bob Chiarito in Chicago, Miesha Miller in New York, and Sue
Horton, Kevin Fogarty and Greg Savoy in Washington; Editing by Susan
Thomas and Grant McCool)
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