An Indian woman, who is seeking asylum in the US after she illegally crossed into the country from Mexico, has been separated from her five-year-old, differently-abled son, a media report said on Friday, 29 June.
The Trump administration's controversial ‘zero tolerance’ policy that supports separating immigrant parents and their children on the US border has resulted in the separation of more than 2,000 children from their parents and guardians, sparking a public outcry.
Bhavan Patel, 33, was granted a $30,000 bond by an Arizona court on Tuesday, The Washington Post reported.
However, it was not immediately clear if she was able to join her disabled son.
This is the first known case of an Indian national who has been separated from her child in recent months under the 'zero-tolerance' policy.
After a nationwide outrage, Trump signed an executive order that stopped the practice.
The Post did not reveal when was she arrested.
Patel sat in an immigration courtroom, a tiny, solitary figure in a faded green prison uniform, the report said.
She fled political persecution in Ahmedabad, India, travelling to Greece and then Mexico before crossing the US border illegally with her disabled five-year-old son, Patel and her attorney said during a bond hearing.
Patel's hair had started turning white. She wrung her hands incessantly, the daily said.
“Her son is not doing well,” said her attorney Alinka Robinson, as a telephonic translator relayed the proceedings to Patel in her native tongue of Gujarati, the daily said in its report from Arizona.
Robinson asked Judge Irene C Feldman to grant her client a $10,000 bond so she could “reunite with her son”.
The prosecutor from the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement told the court that Patel was a flight risk.
Thereafter, the judge quizzed her about her path to the US and whether she had paid a smuggler.
The judge seemed skeptical and the set bond at $30,000, making Patel one of the few separated parents at Eloy to have a bond set, according to detainees, the daily reported.
There is no official figure of the number of Indians being detained in the US jail after they crossed the border illegally.
The Indian Embassy in Washington DC and its Consulates in Houston, New York and San Francisco have sent its senior diplomats to all these federal prisons to ascertain facts and offer consular access to its citizens.
The public outcry in the wake of images and stories of the children caught in the middle of Trump's immigration policy has sparked a fierce debate in the US.
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