Judge praises U.S. efforts in reuniting
migrant families
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[July 21, 2018]
By Tom Hals
(Reuters) - A federal judge said on Friday
the U.S. government had made "very promising" progress toward reuniting
some 2,500 immigrant children separated from their parents at the
U.S.-Mexico border as part of a crackdown on illegal immigration.
The government has six days left to comply with the reunification order
by U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw, who summoned government attorneys to
appear in his San Diego courtroom to update him on efforts made in
bringing families back together.
"I'm very impressed with the effort being made," said Sabraw at the end
of the brief hearing.
Lawyers for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement reported in a court
filing late Thursday that 364 children aged 5 and older had been
reunited since Sabraw's order was issued more than three weeks ago. The
number was updated to 450 today, an ACLU spokesperson said.
Younger children were reunited last week.
In Thursday's status report, filed as part of an American Civil
Liberties Union lawsuit challenging parent-child separations at the
border, the government did not say how many reunifications were likely
before the July 26 deadline.
Nearly 850 parents had been interviewed and cleared for reunification as
of Thursday and another 229 parents had been deemed ineligible because
of criminal records, or because they "waived" reunification or for other
reasons, the report said. The rest are pending review.
More than 850 parents are facing final deportation orders, government
lawyers told the court on Friday. The ACLU has asked Sabraw to give
those parents at least a week after being reunited with their children
before deportation so they have adequate time to obtain legal counsel
and consider options.
Sabraw has temporarily barred deportations of reunified families pending
a final decision.
Also late Thursday, a federal judge in Seattle ordered U.S. immigration
officials to share the information they have provided to the ACLU with
attorneys general from 17 states and the District of Columbia. The AGs
in June filed their lawsuit, which, like the ACLU case, challenges the
administration's family separations and other immigration policies.
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Dunia, an asylum seeker from Honduras, is reunited with her
five-year-old son Wilman at Brownsville South Padre International
Airport in Brownsville, Texas, U.S., following their separation of
more than five weeks through the Trump administration's "Zero
Tolerance" policy, July 20, 2018. REUTERS/Loren Elliott
Children were parted from their parents by U.S. officials at the
border as part of a broader "zero tolerance" crackdown on illegal
immigration by the administration of President Donald Trump,
sparking an international outcry. The president ordered the practice
stopped on June 20.
Sabraw and the government have been at odds over the speed of
reunifications, which the government has said have been slowed by
the need to protect the safety of the children.
After several testy exchanges in hearings and court papers, Sabraw
said on Monday he felt that the government was finally emphasizing
family reunification over lengthy procedures such as DNA testing and
background checks on parents.
On Thursday, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said
her staff was focused on meeting the judge's deadline that same day,
but added that "we will not cut corners."
(Reporting by Tom Hals; Editing by Paul Tait, Marguerita Choy,
Richard Chang and Diane Craft)
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