domingo, 3 de marzo de 2019

Migrant parents separated from children return to US, plead to be reunited | World News, The Indian Express

Migrant parents separated from children return to US, plead to be reunited | World News, The Indian Express

By Reuters |Mexico |Updated: March 3, 2019 1:12:15 pm



Migrant parents separated from children return to US, plead to be reunited

In a crackdown on illegal immigration by President Donald Trump's administration, US officials have separated thousands of children from migrant parents who crossed from Mexico into the United States.

Migrant parents separated from children return to US, plead to be reunited
Central American migrants react as they wait to enter the US, asking for refuge and to be reunited with their children, on March 2, 2019. (Reuters Photo: Cristian Torres)
A large group of Central American migrants who US authorities separated from their children last year when they crossed the Mexican border entered the United States again on Saturday asking for refuge and to be reunited with their kids.
A Reuters witness said some 50 people entered the United States at the international border crossing from Mexicali, Mexico into Calexico, California, where they were met by agents from US Customs and Border Patrol (CBP).
Visibly nervous parents crossed the pedestrian bridge, some with children and carrying luggage, a Reuters witness said. They were accompanied by lawyers from immigration advocacy group Al Otro Lado. The group said 29 parents crossed.
“This is a huge victory for these families, but this fight isn’t over until they’re reunited with their kids,” said Erika Pinheiro, Litigation and Policy Director of Al Otro Lado.
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El Paso shelter director: 1,300 migrants released
A shelter director in El Paso, Texas says his agency has served 1,300 people just in the last five days after they were released by U.S. immigration authorities. Ruben Garcia of Annunciation House says 500 more people arrived just on Wednesday.
The families, who arrived back in Mexico helped by Al Otro Lado, which means “On the Other Side,” hope to present their cases to US authorities and be reunited with their children.


Customs and Border Patrol did not immediately respond to a request for comment out of normal office hours.

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