Radio Blue Heart is on the air!
npr:
“ The children’s lawyer was incensed. Her two tiny clients — one of them blind — had been in a shelter for three months, separated from their mother.
The family had traveled from Mexico to the United States, reaching Nogales, Arizona, on March...

npr:

The children’s lawyer was incensed. Her two tiny clients — one of them blind — had been in a shelter for three months, separated from their mother.

The family had traveled from Mexico to the United States, reaching Nogales, Arizona, on March 1, 2018. Officials at the border found that the mother, Nadia Pulido, had “credible” reasons for seeking asylum from an ex-partner who, she says, beat her and stalked her after their relationship ended.

But U.S. Customs and Border Protection still sent Pulido into an adult detention center run by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. She had an hour to say goodbye and try to assure her blind daughter, 6, and sobbing 3-year-old son that she’d see them in a couple of hours.

“A couple of hours turned into months. Painful months,” Pulido recalled in an interview.

Homeland Security’s Civil Rights Unit Lacks Power To Protect Migrant Kids

Photo: Susan Ferriss/Center for Public Integrity

  1. massivementalitynut reblogged this from dollfacedbunny
  2. forallthstarsinthesky reblogged this from dollfacedbunny
  3. lilacs-roses reblogged this from guardianofreaks
  4. mirages-fievel reblogged this from guardianofreaks
  5. guardianofreaks reblogged this from npr
  6. underadaydream reblogged this from npr
  7. socialjusticeartshare reblogged this from npr
  8. roadshowrigoletto reblogged this from npr
  9. gravityinglass reblogged this from npr
  10. thephilosophershavequestions reblogged this from npr
  11. mari5701 reblogged this from npr
  12. vw-tb0 reblogged this from npr
  13. princessspacemermaid reblogged this from npr
  14. iwonder-lust reblogged this from npr
  15. npr posted this