New York Post

ASYLUM SOLUTIONS

Trump can end migrant crisis without surrenderi­ng to Dems

- ALEX NOWRASTEH

THE separation of families on the border is a punishment grossly disproport­ionate to the offense. The Border Patrol keeps children in cages while their parents, charged with immigratio­n offenses, are held elsewhere. The pictures have drawn outrage, and appropriat­ely so.

The good news is, the Trump administra­tion can stop separating the families of asylum seekers today without backpedali­ng on its commitment to border security.

Two recent Trump administra­tion priorities prompted this crisis. The first comes from Border Patrol agents either rejecting asylum claims outright or telling many would-be asylum-seekers to wait for weeks in Mexico before being allowed to apply.

In the meantime, Attorney General Jeff Sessions ruled that immigratio­n judges should not consider gang violence or domestic abuse in asylum claims — undercutti­ng many of their cases. Asylum seekers and those waiting in Mexico understand­ably believe they have to enter the United States now be- fore Sessions removes any other grounds for claiming asylum.

The second was ending the policy of catch-and-release, whereby asylum seekers are released with court dates but some fail to show up. The Department­s of Justice and Homeland Security recently ordered zero-tolerance prosecutio­n of all illegal border crossers, which guarantees that they’ll be detained, and to start separating families if they entered illegally. Separating families is a choice; it is not required by law.

Turning asylum seekers back at the border and limiting their applicatio­n options has incentiviz­ed some of them to cross into the United States unlawfully to ask for asylum. The government’s response is to prosecute asylum seekers who entered unlawfully for violating immigratio­n law and, in many cases, ignoring their asylum claims. No previous administra­tion has prioritize­d criminal immigratio­n prosecutio­ns over asylum claims.

These actions are supposed to deter illegal entry, but — while it’s admittedly early — haven’t. According to Border Patrol, border crossings have jumped 5 percent since the policy was put into effect in April.

CNN reports that, according to internal Homeland Security documents, officials expected the deterrence to work: “The full impact of policy initiative­s are not fully realized for 2-3 weeks following public messaging — however, some migrants already underway may temporaril­y halt to determine the effects of the new policy,” one document reads.

But deterrence can only work if the cost imposed on asylum seekers is great enough to make them stay in their home countries or settle in another one. Economist Michael Clemens found that the high murder rate and gang violence in Central America is driving the exodus. No matter how painful family separation is, the violence many of these migrants are escaping from their home countries makes it worth the risk of separation.

Yet officials should’ve known this wouldn’t deter migrants. Last year, the administra­tion experiment­ed with mandatory prosecutio­n and family separation in the El Paso border sector but it didn’t deter families from entering. As noted by Dara Lind at Vox, the number of families apprehende­d actually increased by 64 percent over the course of the experiment. Three other border sectors — which didn’t take the zero-tolerance approach — had a lower rate of increase during that time than El Paso did.

But even if President Trump doesn’t want to go back to catchand-release, there are three things that can be done to end family separation­s for asylum seekers. The first is to allow Central American asylum seekers to make their claims at a port of entry on the Southwest border, instead of telling many of them to postpone their asylum applicatio­ns, as is the current Border Patrol practice. This will keep families together and incentiviz­e them to enter legally rather than illegally.

The second is to extend the Family Case Management Program to all asylum seekers. This program, which the government recently closed, kept families together in shelters, not separated in cages, while they awaited their asylum hearings. Furthermor­e, 100 percent of the people in that program attended their court appearance­s, and only 2 percent disappeare­d into the US after their hearing — addressing Sessions’ concern of skipping hearings.

The third option is to allow those fleeing gang violence to apply for asylum. This will take some of the pressure off the border by removing the fear that the government could shut down the entire asylum system in the near future.

These three policies aren’t a panacea, but they end catch-and-release while preserving the asylum system and curtailing child separation. Violations of immigratio­n law by themselves are not a good enough reason to separate families, but these three policy changes are preferable to the current administra­tion-made border tragedy.

 ??  ?? A matter of trust: Border Patrol approaches a young asylum seeker in Texas.
A matter of trust: Border Patrol approaches a young asylum seeker in Texas.

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