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Melania Trump makes surprise visit to US-Mexico border immigration detention centre

'How can I help these children to reunite with their families as quickly as possible?' Ms Trump asked during her trip

Carol Schaeffer
New York
Thursday 21 June 2018 13:45 EDT
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Melania Trump visits child immigration center in Texas

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Melania Trump has made a surprise visit to the US-Mexico border as she seeks to reunite separated parents and children "as quickly as possible" amid a backlash over a "zero tolerance" policy on illegal arrivals.

The first lady has travelled to two Texas facilities housing some of the 2,300 migrant children being held by the government while their parents are being prosecuted for illegally crossing into America.

As his wife was visiting the border, President Donald Trump said he was directing federal agencies to begin reuniting children and parents, a first step to implementing his executive order reversing a policy that had drawn global condemnation.

Facing intense pressure, Mr Trump signed an executive order on Wednesday to stop the separations and keep families together during immigration proceedings. The order still faces possible legal challenges and administration lawyers were expected to file a request as early as Thursday to modify a 1997 court settlement that limits the government's detention of minors to 20 days.

Mr Trump's order, an unusual reversal by him, moves parents with children to the front of the line for immigration proceedings, but it does not end a 10-week-old “zero tolerance” policy that calls for prosecution of immigrants crossing the border illegally under the country's criminal entry statute.

At the Upbring New Hope Children's Centre in McAllen, Ms Trump thanked the staff for their "hard work and compassion" and asked how she could help to bring families back together.

“I'm here to learn about your facility, in which I know you house children on a long-term basis, and also like to ask you how I can help these children to reunite with their families as quickly as possible,” Ms Trump said.

Jeff Sessions says US border control detention centers not comparable to Nazi concentration camps: 'Jews were trying to leave the country'

The first lady asked how often the children get to speak to their parents ot families, and what physical and mental state the children are in when they arrive.

“Usually when they get here they're very distraught,” one official at the centre said. “When they see the environment,” the official added, the children usually settle down.

“First Lady Melania Trump has arrived in Texas to take part in briefings and tours at a no-profit social services centre for children who have entered the United States illegally and a customs and border patrol processing centre,” Ms Trump's office said in a statement. “Her goals are to thank law enforcement and social services providers for their hard work, lend support and hear more on how the administration can build upon the already existing efforts to reunite children with their families.”

Ms Trump toured two facilities in the city that host 60 children, aged from five to 17 and mostly from Honduras and El Salvador. The shelter opened in 2014 in a facility that had been a vacant nursing home and assisted living facility.

“This was 100 percent [the first lady's] idea. She absolutely wanted to come,” Ms Trump's spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham said, adding that it was her idea before Mr Trump signed the executive order, and Ms Trump had no second thoughts after the order was signed. “She wants to see what’s happening for herself and she wants to lend her support, executive order or not. The executive order certainly is helping pave the way a little bit, but there’s still a lot to be done,” Ms Grisham said.

Ms Trump definitely wants to see children reunited with her families, with Ms Grisham saying she would. “do everything she can and she’ll speak her opinions as much as she can.”

When questioned on whether Ms Trump supports the “zero tolerance policy,” Ms Grisham said that "she supports that the law should be followed.”

The first lady had previously issued a rare statement over the weekend saying that she "hated" to see families separated.

“Mrs Trump hates to see children separated from their families and hopes both sides of the aisle can finally come together to achieve successful immigration reform", the statement said , adding: “She believes we need to be a country that follows all laws, but also a country that governs with heart.”

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