18 Jun 2018

Melania calls on 'both sides' to end child separation policy

11:33 am on 18 June 2018

US first lady Melania Trump has called for an end to the policy of separating parents and children illegally entering the country from Mexico.

US First Lady Melania Trump.

US First Lady Melania Trump. Photo: AFP

Mrs Trump "believes we need to be a country that follows all laws, but also a country that governs with heart," her spokeswoman said.

Her comments follow growing controversy over President Donald Trump's "zero-tolerance" policy.

In a recent six-week period there were nearly 2000 family separations.

Adults who try to cross the border, many planning to seek asylum, are placed in custody and face criminal prosecution for illegal entry.

As a result, hundreds of minors are now being housed in detention centres, and kept away from their parents - a policy which rights groups have criticised as unprecedented.

Mr Trump has blamed a law "Democrats gave us" for the policy, but it is unclear what law he is referring to.

In a tweet on Saturday he urged Democrats to work with Republicans to create new laws.

However, critics have pointed out that detaining children apart from their parents was a policy announced by US Attorney-General Jeff Sessions last month and does not require congressional action to stop.

The policy has divided Republicans, with its defenders pointing out that children are routinely taken from parents accused of crimes.

The additional child detentions - reportedly including babies and toddlers - have resulted in some shelters and foster homes reporting that they are running out of space.

On Sunday, Democratic members of Congress paid a "surprise Father's Day visit" to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention centre in New Jersey, demanding to see detainees separated from their children.

Meanwhile, protesters marched to a tent city in Tornillo, Texas, holding hundreds of children separated from their parents.

They chanted "Families united!" and "Free our children now!", reported NPR.

- BBC

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