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DHS chief says that border challenge is more acute than before


U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas speaks during a press briefing at the White House in Washington, March 1, 2021.

Kevin Lemarque | Reuters

Department of Homeland Security chief Alejandro Mayorkas said Sunday that the surge in unaccompanied minors at the U.S.-Mexico border poses an unprecedented challenge because of actions taken under former President Donald Trump, as critics accuse the current White House of being unprepared for a humanitarian crisis at the nation’s doorstep.

“There was a system in place in both Republican and Democratic administrations that was torn down during the Trump administration, and that is why the challenge is more acute than it ever has been before,” Mayorkas said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

Mayorkas appeared on CNN, NBC and Fox on Sunday to defend the administration of President Joe Biden as it faces scrutiny over record numbers of children being held in jail-like Customs and Border Protection facilities, including thousands beyond the 72-hour legal limit.

The Biden administration reversed a Trump-era policy of expelling unaccompanied minors apprehended at the border, instead allowing them into the United States for processing. Republicans, Democrats and human rights activists have criticized the conditions under which children are being held.

Critics have said that the change in policy has encouraged unaccompanied children to make the perilous journey at a time when the U.S. does not have the infrastructure in place to properly care for them.

Mayorkas has previously said there is no crisis at the border, though he has acknowledged that the U.S. is on pace to encounter more individuals on the southwest border than anytime in the last two decades.

The Biden administration has deployed the Federal Emergency Management Agency to move children quickly into the care of the Department of Health and Human Services until they are placed with a family member in the U.S. or a sponsor as their immigration cases proceed.

NBC News and other media organizations have been denied access to the facilities where the unaccompanied children are being held. Requests for photos inside the facilities have also been denied.

Mayorkas said Sunday that his department would grant media access to Border Patrol facilities when it could do so in a safe manner under Covid-19 health protocols. The Trump administration allowed media access to facilities at the height of controversy surrounding its child separation policy in 2018.

After visiting a border facility, Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., wrote on Twitter on Friday that he “fought back tears” talking to a 13-year-old girl who explained through a translator “how terrified she was, having been separated from her grandmother and without her parents.”

Mayorkas, pressed to provide a time-frame for when the federal government would be able to have the border situation under control, declined to do so. He said that the goal was to be able to meet the 72-hour time limit as…



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