Images of Children Separated From Families at U.s. Border
These photos were the Trump assistants'southward attempt to quiet criticism. They're merely increasing critics' horror.
A video of a Texas edge detention center reveals children housed in metallic enclosures.
Every bit attention to the result of child separation reaches a new high on Monday, the Trump administration is trying to defend what critics call "cruel" and "immoral" policy. It's even releasing photos and video of the facilities where children separated from their parents are existence held — but far from tamping down criticism, it's but increasing critics' horror.
When Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-OR) visited a detention center for unaccompanied immigrant children ii weeks ago in McAllen, Texas, what he saw shocked him. At that place were "hundreds of children locked upwardly in cages there at that facility," he told CNN, calculation that the "cages [were] made out of fencing and then wire and nets stretched beyond the top of them so people can't climb out of them."
Since that interview, there'south been pushback from both the administration and conservative reporters, who contend that conditions aren't nearly equally dire as Merkley and others have described. "Those children are being well taken care of," said Chaser General Jeff Sessions when asked past radio host Hugh Hewitt about the treatment of migrant children separated from their parents.
In what appears to exist a public relations endeavour to counter some of the damning descriptions of its detention centers, US Community and Edge Protection is now giving the broader public the opportunity to come across the conditions for themselves, past releasing video and photos of the McAllen location. The Section of Health and Human Services has too shared images of a shelter that unaccompanied immigrant children are sent to in Brownsville, Texas, later on they leave the border patrol heart.
Rather than prove the assistants's betoken, the images of the McAllen facility only serve to farther illustrate the horrific nature of its practices, showing kids held in metal enclosures sprawled atop mattresses laid on a concrete floor, with fiddling around them except flimsy space blankets. "More than i,100 people were inside the large, dark facility that's divided into split wings for unaccompanied children, adults on their own, and mothers and fathers with children," the Associated Printing reported, following a Lord's day visit.
BREAKING: Border Patrol @CBP merely gave us this video of the detention facility we toured yesterday in McAllen, Texas. We weren't allowed to bring in cameras, or interview anyone. To be clear: this is government handout video. pic.twitter.com/Zjy80qIZFZ
— David Begnaud (@DavidBegnaud) June xviii, 2018
These images were just released by border patrol @CBP showing the McAllen, Texas detention facility that we were allowed to bout today. For now, we tin but rely on what they give united states. They volition not allow us inside to film on our ain. Why? "Privacy"; they don't want faces shown pic.twitter.com/laZAyEHwij
— David Begnaud (@DavidBegnaud) June 17, 2018
As noted by the Los Angeles Times, the police force currently requires whatsoever unaccompanied youth to be transferred from the border patrol detention center to HHS within 72 hours. People stay an boilerplate of roughly 50 hours at the McAllen center, the LA Times reports.
Handout images from HHS also capture the inside of Casa Padre, the largest government-contracted migrant youth shelter, located in Brownsville, Texas, in a old Walmart Supercenter. This shelter is one of the places where unaccompanied immigrant children are sent after they depart the border patrol detention facility. Boys who are placed in the shelter stay for 49 days, on average, according to a Washington Postal service report.
"Nosotros're trying to do the best that nosotros can taking care of these children. Our goal ultimately is to reunite kids with their families," Juan Sanchez, the CEO of Southwest Key, a nonprofit that runs the Brownsville site under government contract, told the Washington Postal service. "Nosotros're not a detention eye. … What we operate are shelters that accept care of kids. It's a big, big difference."
The photos of the shelter prove rooms property multiple twin beds, a cafeteria, and walls bearing murals of one-time President Barack Obama as well as President Donald Trump. More than 1,400 immigrant boys are being housed in the Brownsville facility, including dozens who were recently separated from their families, per the Post.
The Trump administration has faced immense backfire over its "nix-tolerance" policy, which prosecutes whatsoever adults that come into the US illegally as criminals, forcing the separation of parents who are arrested and their children, who are put into federal custody.
According to the Department of Homeland Security, nigh 2,000 kids were taken from their parents in the bridge of 6 weeks this past spring. But even these numbers are speedily becoming dwarfed. On Monday morning, an anonymous administration official told the Washington Examiner that more than than xi,500 children were being held every bit of Fri. The increased attending on the policy has acquired a massive uproar over how fundamentally savage it is.
A glimpse into the secretive detention sites and shelters where families and children are housed does little to soften this perception.
Source: https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2018/6/18/17474986/family-separation-border-video
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