Trump executive order called a sham, not a fix
In the face of mounting domestic and international backlash over
his administration's inhumane practice of forcibly ripping families apart at
the U.S.-Mexico border, President Donald Trump signed an executive order directing the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
to detain families together, a policy Amnesty International decried as
just "another way to punish parents and children for seeking
protection."
"Make no mistake—this executive order is a betrayal of
families fleeing violence and persecution," Denise Bell, refugee and
migrant rights researcher at Amnesty International USA, said in a statement
after Trump signed the order.
"The United States cannot continue to treat vulnerable families fleeing horrific violence and persecution like criminals. We must do everything we can to ensure protection for people who have lost everything. It is time to end family detention once and for all."
"The United States cannot continue to treat vulnerable families fleeing horrific violence and persecution like criminals. We must do everything we can to ensure protection for people who have lost everything. It is time to end family detention once and for all."
While Trump insisted during remarks to reporters on Wednesday
that he decided to sign the executive order—which was drafted by DHS Secretary
Kirstjen Nielsen—because he has "compassion"
for immigrant children, the order does absolutely nothing to reunite the
thousands of families that the White House has already separated and continues
the administration's so-called "zero tolerance" policy.
Echoing Lee in a series of tweets on Wednesday, the advocacy
group Women's March notes that "instead of imprisoning children in
separate internment camps away from their parents, this administration will now
imprison children in the same internment camps as their parents."
Trump's executive order comes after weeks of constant lies by
White House officials and Republican lawmakers, who repeatedly claimed that the
family separations adhered to the letter of the law and that "Congress
alone" could remedy the humanitarian catastrophe the president and
his racist team of advisers manufactured.
As Buzzfeed explains,
Trump's order instructs "DHS to keep custody over families while both
criminal and administrative immigration proceedings are pending" and
"directs the defense secretary to provide any existing facilities that
could be used to detain families together, and to build more as needed."
The order also directs White House lawyers to request a
modification of the 1997 Flores Settlement, which states that federal officials must"place each detained minor in the
least restrictive setting appropriate" and release minors "without
unnecessary delay."
As the New York Times notes, if
courts don't accept this proposed modification, Trump's order is likely to
spark legal challenges arguing that the "makeshift facilities" and
indefinite detention of families the White House is demanding run afoul of the
terms of the Flores Settlement.
In a statement on
Wednesday, Marielena HincapiƩ, executive director of the National Immigration
Law Center, argued that Trump's executive order is a substance-free attempt to
"placate Americans who have been rightly outraged by their government's
repugnant policies, including separating children and babies from their parents
and housing them in cages."
"Jailing families is not an acceptable
solution to putting children in cages. The best—and safest—place for these
children is with their families and in their communities," HincapiƩ
concluded. "The Trump administration pretends that alternatives to
detention don't exist. This is false. There are numerous alternatives that are
both more humane and less costly, but this president refuses to use them."