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during the rule of the ghost people del norte (hide the babies in the scales of Quetzalcóatl) | JH Almeida: A Triumph of The Wall

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... | by Fermin Guzman

  Cholula, Puebla 2018... [Lazara Cardenas, Sanctorum, Puebla]: photo by Fermin Guzman, 31 May 2018

... | by Fermin Guzman

Cholula, Puebla 2018... [Lazara Cardenas, Sanctorum, Puebla]: photo by Fermin Guzman, 31 May 2018
 
... | by Fermin Guzman

  Cholula, Puebla 2018... [Lazara Cardenas, Sanctorum, Puebla]: photo by Fermin Guzman, 31 May 2018 

... | by Fermin Guzman

  La venganza de Quetzalcóatl... Los Reyes La Paz, EDOMEX 2018 [San Miguel Teotongo (secc Las Torr, Mexico City, Distrito Federal]: photo by Fermin Guzman, 6 June 2018

... | by Fermin Guzman

  La venganza de Quetzalcóatl... Los Reyes La Paz, EDOMEX 2018 [San Miguel Teotongo (secc Las Torr, Mexico City, Distrito Federal]: photo by Fermin Guzman, 6 June 2018

... | by Fermin Guzman

  La venganza de Quetzalcóatl... Los Reyes La Paz, EDOMEX 2018 [San Miguel Teotongo (secc Las Torr, Mexico City, Distrito Federal]: photo by Fermin Guzman, 6 June 2018


A Honduran asylum seeker carries her daughter, age 2, before being taken into custody by Border Patrol agents near the US-Mexico border this week. #gettyimages #undocumented #gettyimagesnews: image via John Moore @jbMoorephoto, 16 June 2018

When the Government Takes Your Children: John Moore/Getty Images/FOTO, 14 June 2018

Night has fallen in McAllen, Texas, a bordertown of about 130,000 people, flanked by the Rio Grande River. A Honduran asylum seeker — all of 2 years old and dressed in a bright pink sweater — cries as her mother is searched by U.S. Border Patrol agents. The next stop on their arduous journey — one that began one month and some 1,500 miles earlier — will be a U.S. Customs and Border Protection processing center where they will be forcibly separated in keeping with President Trump's new zero-tolerance immigration policy.

John Moore, a Pulitzer Prize winner and photographer for Getty Images (which owns FOTO), has witnessed the struggles of illegal immigrants for the past decade, collecting his often heartbreaking pictures into the book "Undocumented: Immigration and the Militarization of the United States-Mexico Border." But nothing could prepare Moore for this administration's inhumane tactics of separating children from their parents while their cases are adjudicated — a process that can take months or even years.
"As a father myself, it was very difficult for me to see these families detained, knowing that they would soon be split up," Moore says of his recent ride-along with the Border Patrol. "I could see on their faces that they had no idea what was about to happen."

During the course of his June 12th visit, Moore photographed everything from asylum-seekers rafting over the border from Mexico to agents chasing immigrants through sugar cane fields. Here, he tells FOTO what he saw on the ground.
 

On April 6 Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced a new policy for an "escalated effort to prosecute those who decide to illegally cross our border." He also directed prosecutors to prioritize immigration cases. And though the policy does not explicitly call for the separation of parent and child, in practice, it does precisely that: While parents are taken to be prosecuted, their children are left with a sponsor or shelter. "I doubt many of these families knew about the Trump administration's recent policy on separating parents from children at the border," Moore says.

During a two-week period in May alone, some 650 children were separated from their parents as a direct result of the policy. Many, if not all, of the immigrants Moore photographed during his ride-along were asylum seekers from Central America, fleeing their home country due to fear of violence or even death. But a new ruling this week from Attorney General Sessions suddenly makes many previously valid asylum claims invalid.

John Moore: "Most of these families were scared, to various degrees," says Moore. "I doubt any of them had ever done anything like this before – flee their home countries with their children, traveling thousands of miles through dangerous conditions to seek political asylum in the United States, many arriving in the dead of night." 

In one photo, a Border Patrol agent shines a spotlight on a terrified mother and son found in the woods.



A US Border Patrol spotlight illuminates a fearful Honduran mother and son, after they crossed the Rio Grande from Mexico and became lost in the woods. They were taken into custody. Trump’s “zero tolerance” policy splits families during asylum process.#immigration #gettyimagesnews: image via John Moore @jbmoorephoto, 13 June 2018

 "Late at the end of my visit with the Border Patrol this week, I stood in a secluded spot photographing rafts of immigrants coming across the Rio Grande, dropping off families on the U.S. side. As people made their way up the riverbank into the woods, I could hear branches breaking as they tried to find a pathway out," Moore tells FOTO. "A child, who sounded like a baby, started crying, as the group pushed through the underbrush. Later, when the agent and I made our way out, we found them walking along a dirt road. It wasn't a baby after all, but rather a 10-year-old Honduran boy with special needs. He was terrified. To try and calm him, I showed him some pictures of the river, which I displayed on the back of my camera. I then told him something that was natural to say in the moment, but that I immediately regretted. 'No te preocupas, todo va a estar bien,' I said. I told him not to worry, everything will be alright. I really wish I hadn't said that, because I'm not sure it's true."

"In the case of the 2-year-old Honduran girl, the mother told me they had been traveling for a full month and were exhausted. They were taken into custody with a group of about 20 immigrants, mostly women and children at about 11p.m.," Moore says. "Before transporting them to a processing center, transportation officers body searched everyone and the mother was one of the last. She was told to set the child down, while she was searched. The little girl immediately started crying. While it's not uncommon for toddlers to feel separation anxiety, this would have been stressful for any child. I took only a few photographs and was almost overcome with emotion myself. Then very quickly, they were in the van, and I stopped to take a few deep breaths."
 

A mother is searched and her 2-year-old daughter bursts into tears as Border Patrol agents enforce the Trump administration's zero tolerance policy near the U.S., Mexico border. Photo: @jbmoorephoto: image via Getty Images News @GettyImagesNews, 14 June 2018


Central American immigrants near the US-Mexico border this week. US AG Sessions announced domestic and gang violence will no longer be grounds for asylum seekers to gain entry to the United States.#undocumented #immigration #gettyimagesnews: image via John Moore @jbmoorephoto, 13 June 2018

... | by Fermin Guzman

  Los Reyes La Paz, EDOMEX 2018... [Coaxuscos,Los Reyes Acaquilpan, Mexico]: photo by Fermin Guzman, 6 June 2018

... | by Fermin Guzman
  
Los Reyes La Paz, EDOMEX 2018... [Coaxuscos,Los Reyes Acaquilpan, Mexico]: photo by Fermin Guzman, 6 June 2018

... | by Fermin Guzman

Los Reyes La Paz, EDOMEX 2018... [Coaxuscos,Los Reyes Acaquilpan, Mexico]: photo by Fermin Guzman, 6 June 2018
JH Almeida: "A single headed Beast..."

A single headed Beast, feckless 
                           picador
Simple, thick and wet
Bulls are on Parade
No Shame 
               and Fences
                           everywhere proclaim *
A Triumph of The Wall

6. 16. 18 
__
* - ghost ed. in tenebris noctis


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