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Trump administration to place unaccompanied migrant children in tents at remote Texas site

Shelters for unaccompanied minors have been filling up as the Trump administration cracks down on border crossings

Jeremy B. White
San Francisco
Friday 15 June 2018 01:28 BST
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Children traveling with a caravan of migrants from Central America to the US are pictured under a plastic tarp at a camp near the San Ysidro checkpoint in Tijuana, Mexico
Children traveling with a caravan of migrants from Central America to the US are pictured under a plastic tarp at a camp near the San Ysidro checkpoint in Tijuana, Mexico ( REUTERS/Edgard Garrido)

The Trump administration has decided to house potentially hundreds of migrant children in tents in a remote area of Texas.

Young immigrants have been surging into increasingly full government shelters in the months since the administration began attempting to prosecute adults who seek to cross the US border, which has resulted in families being broken up.

With some existing facilities nearing capacity, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) - which has responsibility over unaccompanied immigrant children - has settled on constructing a temporary site in the border town of Tornillo, Texas.

“HHS is legally required to provide care and shelter for all unaccompanied alien children referred by [the Department of Homeland Security], and works in close coordination with DHS on the security and safety of the children and community”, spokesman Kenneth Wolfe said in an email.

Asked if the structures would be tents, Mr Wolfe said that HHS uses the term “soft-sided structures”.

He said the structures be able to accommodate 360 youths with “potential expansion for more” and confirmed they would be air-conditioned.​

The fragmentation of immigrant families who arrive at the border - and the consequent packing of young migrants into government-run shelters - has generated outrage in recent weeks.

Thousands of people had signed up to protest across the country, seeking to amplify resistance to a practice that a senior United Nations official called a “child rights violation”.

After journalists were allowed to tour a 1,500 person facility in Brownsville, Texas that used to be a Walmart, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders sparred with reporters over the administration’s policy towards young migrants.

CNN political analyst Brian Karem presses White House press secretary Sarah Sanders on family separations at the US-Mexico border

“Don’t you have any empathy for what these people are going through?” reporter Brian Karem said asked Ms Sanders, noting that she is a parent.

Echoing Donald Trump, Ms Sanders blamed the situation on Democratic intransigence.

The US president has faulted Democrats for blocking an immigration deal and has falsely asserted that his rivals authored a law mandating the family separations.

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