US President Donald Trump | AP 
World

Donald Trump defends separating immigrant families at border

In June, the Trump administration abandoned the controversial policy of separating children from their parents upon arrival at the US-Mexico border.

From our online archive

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump has defended his administration's policy of separating families that arrive in the country illegally, saying the fear of separation was an effective deterrent.

Trump was addressing reporters on Saturday outside the White House as he departed for a campaign rally in Richmond, Kentucky, reports Efe news.

"If they feel there will be separation, they don't come," he said.

"You've got some really bad people out there."

In June, the Trump administration abandoned the controversial policy of separating children from their parents upon arrival at the US-Mexico border after the measure had led to widespread condemnation in the US and abroad.

Over 2,300 children were held at the border in May and June while their parents were prosecuted for entering the country illegally.

After signing an executive order at the end of June abandoning the policy, Trump said, "we are keeping a very powerful border and it continues to be a zero tolerance. We have zero tolerance for people who enter our country illegally".

Trump slams US Supreme Court ruling on birthright citizenship; calls it 'too bad for country'

PM Modi talks to Iran's President Pezeshkian; backs dialogue, diplomacy in West Asia

An “ocean of opportunity” and of competition

India-Japan annual summit to focus on AI, mobility roadmap and maritime cooperation

Atleast 14 children killed as roof of tutoring centre collapse in eastern Pakistan

SCROLL FOR NEXT