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Lib’ruls win one for the children

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liberals: Party of God and family values

World

Trump’s family-separation policy faces international condemnation from Pope Francis, Theresa May and others



On World Refugee Day, Pope Francis joined international criticism of the Trump administration's policy of separating families at the U.S.-Mexico border. The pope said he supported bishops who called it "contrary to our Catholic values." (Reuters)

By Chico Harlan and William Branigin

June 20 at 1:08 PM ET

VATICAN CITY — President Trump’s immigration policies drew growing international condemnation Wednesday from allies and religious leaders, including Pope Francis, who took aim on moral grounds at the administration’s practice of separating migrant children from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Responding to outrage from across the U.S. political spectrum, Trump later Wednesday said at a White House meeting with lawmakers that he would be “signing something” shortly to keep migrant families together. He did not immediately provide details. Administration officials said a new executive order would keep families together in federal custody while awaiting prosecution for illegal border crossings.

The criticism Trump faced resembled the global reaction last year to his travel ban targeting several Muslim-majority countries. But in this case, the criticism came in part from leaders who have contended with border security issues of their own — and who say Trump overstepped an important line.

Leaders from London to Ottawa to Tehran described the separations as wrong and cruel. In pointed comments before lawmakers in Parliament, British Prime Minister Theresa May described photos she had seen of children “being held in what appear to be cages.”

“This is wrong,” she said. “This is not something we agree with.”



British Prime Minister Theresa May said June 20 that images of children being held in cages in U.S. migrant detention facilities were “deeply disturbing.” (Reuters)

The pope, who has placed the issues facing migrants at the center of his papacy, also stepped into the controversy, saying in an interview with the Reuters news agency that he agreed with statements by U.S. Catholic bishops, who called the separations “immoral” and “contrary to our Catholic values.” He added that “populism” and “creating psychosis” are not the way to resolve migration problems.



“It’s not easy, but populism is not the solution,” the pope said in the interview.

The separation practice began in earnest last month as part of the administration’s “zero-tolerance” policy in an effort to discourage illegal immigration, appeal to hard-liners in Trump’s base and extract congressional funding for his promised border wall.

In the Canadian Parliament on Wednesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called the U.S. policy “unacceptable” and “wrong.”

In the Netherlands, two junior parties in the ruling coalition said they wanted to haul in the U.S. ambassador for a grilling about the policy. Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte told the NOS broadcaster: “I think we’ve all seen those images of that crying girl, and have also read the stories. That’s all distressing.”

The policy even drew fire from one of Europe’s most prominent anti-immigrant leaders, France’s Marine Le Pen. “I am opposed to a procedure that separates parents and children,” she told France 2 television. She added: “Those who are responsible are the immigrant parents and the politicians who encourage them to come.” .



Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham (D-N.M.) demonstrates during a House Republican conference meeting on immigration legislation at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, June 19, 2018. (Aaron P. Bernstein/Bloomberg)

Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said Wednesday that the administration’s separation policy was “a big concern.” The Shiite Muslim cleric, who wields ultimate religious and political authority in Iran, often weighs in on U.S. domestic issues, including the Black Lives Matter movement and last year’s violence during a white nationalists’ rally in Charlottesville.

“One cannot watch with a sound state of mind these children crying on TV,” read a tweet from Khamenei’s English-language Twitter account. He made similar remarks Wednesday at a meeting with Iranian lawmakers, some of which were posted on his official website.



“How can they commit such a crime, separating children from mothers for a cruel policy?” Khamenei posted on Twitter, using the hashtag #KeepFamiliesTogether.

U.S. authorities have sought to implement Trump’s policy on illegal immigration by criminally prosecuting all migrants caught crossing the border without authorization. That has meant jailing adults and sending their children to government shelters. So far, more than 2,000 children have been separated from their parents, prompting an outcry at home and abroad.

In the interview Sunday night, the pope also took aim at Italy’s new populist government, which has been cracking down on asylum seekers attempting dangerous crossings by boat from Africa.

“I believe that you cannot reject people who arrive,” Francis said, according to Reuters. “You have to receive them, help them, look after them, accompany them and then see where to put them, but throughout all of Europe.”

He added: “Some governments are working on it, and people have to be settled in the best possible way, but creating psychosis is not the cure. Populism does not resolve things. What resolves things is acceptance, study, prudence.”

Last week, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops denounced the Trump administration’s “immoral” separation of families and called the crackdown on migrants a “right-to-life” issue. One bishop attending the biannual meeting in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., reportedly suggested “canonical penalties” for Catholics involved in implementing the Trump policies.



In a statement, the conference condemned the “continued use of family separation at the U.S./Mexico border as an implementation of the Administration’s zero tolerance policy.” It added: “Our government has the discretion in our laws to ensure that young children are not separated from their parents and exposed to irreparable harm and trauma. Families are the foundational element of our society and they must be able to stay together.”

In his interview with Reuters, the pope said, “I am on the side of the bishops’ conference.”

He also warned that aging societies in Europe face “a great demographic winter” without more immigrants. He predicted that Europe “will become empty” if immigration is cut off.

The pope spoke as Trump’s policy continued to draw condemnation across U.S. society and around the world.

In Britain, a Labour Party lawmaker, Gavin Shuker, noted that Trump is scheduled to visit Britain next month and asked what it would take for May to rescind the invitation. “President Trump has locked up 2,000 little children in cages and is refusing to release them unless he’s allowed to build a wall. He’s quit the U.N. Human Rights Council, praised [North Korean leader] Kim Jong Un’s treatment of his own people, turned away Muslims. What does this man have to do to have the invitation . . . revoked?

May replied that the visit would go ahead but that “when we disagree with the United States, we tell them so.”

Her comments added the voice of America’s closest ally to criticism expressed Tuesday by the governments of Mexico, El Salvador and France, as well as the secretary general of the United Nations.



Pope Francis has placed the issues facing migrants and refugees at the center of his papacy, urging countries to be welcoming even as that message faces the head winds of nationalism and border closures in the United States and across Europe. Last year, Francis said it was important that migrants and refugees be offered a “dignified initial accommodation” and that migrants’ rights be respected “independent of their legal status.”

The pope took his first official trip outside Rome to a small Italian island, with the goal of bringing attention to the deadly journey taken by migrants across the Mediterranean. He has also advocated for the acceptance of migrants while visiting countries such as Poland that have closed their doors. His frequent denunciation of anti-immigration politics has put him at odds with some of Europe’s hard-liners, including Italy’s powerful interior minister, Matteo Salvini, who has made a point of approvingly referencing not Francis but his predecessor, Benedict XVI.

Still, the Argentine-born pope, 81, remains very popular with U.S. Catholics, according to research conducted earlier this year by the Pew Research Service, with 84 percent saying they have a favorable opinion of him. Among voters who are Republican or lean to the right, however, 55 percent see Francis as too liberal.

“The pope’s voice really strikes a deep chord with many people, all over the world,” Michael Czerny, the Vatican’s undersecretary for migrants and refugees, said in an interview. “So, when people hear the pope standing up for these people, there is a lot of sympathy. The trouble is, it’s a complex reality, and there are people who are fearful, and those fears can be whipped up — and they have been. It’s important that he speaks on behalf of people who are otherwise voiceless.



Czerny said that in the case of the separation of children and families, the pope’s stance came from “basic humanity and sheer common sense.” Czerny added: “I don’t think you have to dig deep into religious tradition — though I can’t imagine any religious tradition that would condone this. It’s not a question of dogma. It a question of humanity.”

Branigin reported from Washington. Karla Adam in London, Erin Cunningham in Istanbul and Michael Birnbaum in Brussels contributed to this report.


Chico Harlan is The Washington Post's Rome bureau chief. Previously, he was The Post’s East Asia bureau chief, covering the natural and nuclear disasters in Japan and a leadership change in North Korea. He has also been a member of The Post's financial and national enterprise teams.


William Branigin writes and edits breaking news. He previously was a reporter on The Post’s national and local staffs and spent 19 years overseas, reporting in Southeast Asia, Central America, the Middle East and Europe.


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