Skip to main content
  • English
  • العربية
  •  
  •  
Home Al Jazeera Media Network

A truly global network

play

Live

Main navigation

  • Who We Are
    • Our Story
    • Vision
    • Mission
    • Values
    • Our Journey
    • Virtual Tour
    • Code of Ethics
    • Editorial Standards
    • Code of Conduct
  • Leadership
  • Our Network
  • Faces
    • Arabic
    • English
    • Mubasher
    • Balkans
  • Awards
  • Events
  • Press Releases
  • More
    • Publications
    • Videos
    • FAQ
    • Press Kit
    • Our Martyrs
play

Live

Al Jazeera Programme Fault Lines investigates barriers to asylum under Trump

Published on: 10 Sep 2018
  • Share
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • WhatsApp

●  Fault Lines traveled to Honduras to interview two fathers deported from the U.S. after being separated from their children this summer.

●  On the U.S. border with Mexico, Al Jazeera’s documentary crew witnessed two Guatemalan teenagers being turned away from the U.S. port of entry. They were allegedly told there was no space for them.

●  Parents had to go through an asylum interview process while separated from their children.

●  Detained parents allege they were separated a second time after refusing to agree to their children’s deportation.

(Washington D.C. – 11th September, 2018) – Fault Lines, Al Jazeera English’s Emmy and Peabody-award winning documentary programme, is releasing an investigative documentary “No Shelter: Family Separation at the Border” examining how the U.S., under Donald Trump, is closing its doors to asylum seekers escaping violence.

After the Trump administration's “zero tolerance” immigration policy was fully implemented in May this year, nearly 3,000 children were separated from their parents after arriving at the southern border of the U.S.

       The Fault Lines team traveled to Honduras and tracked down two fathers who were deported after being separated from their children. The asylum seekers, who said they were pressured into signing documents in English that they did not understand, described the pain of being separated from their children. “It’s like a nightmare, and you don’t wake up,” said Elmer, whose 14-year-old daughter was held in a shelter in the U.S for nearly three months

          The short film looks at other ways the Trump administration is making it harder for migrants to seek asylum, including stationing border agents in the middle of bridges connecting the U.S. and Mexico. In early August, on the bridge connecting Ciudad Juarez, Mexico with El Paso, Texas, the team witnessed two teenage siblings from Guatemala being turned away as they tried to claim asylum and told there was no space for them. Half an hour later, as border agents noticed the crew filming, they allowed the siblings in.

          Fault Lines also spoke with Bety, a mother still recovering from the trauma of being separated from her 5-year-old daughter, Vanessa, for over a month. She had to go through the complicated process of claiming asylum while still separated. Her lawyer said that while Bety’s case should have met the threshold for asylum, she was rejected by an asylum officer and an immigration judge. Bety told our crew she met dozens of other parents who had also been rejected for asylum while separated from their children.

        Fault Lines also investigated alleged coercive tactics by immigration officials. Parents being held in New Mexico spoke exclusively to Fault Lines, telling us that they were reunited with their children - only to be separated a few hours later by immigration officials. They said they were placed in detention again after they refused to sign a form that would have waived their children’s claim to asylum. “They were pressuring us,” a father said from detention.

            As the Trump administration continues to pursue an immigration policy that makes it more difficult for some to claim asylum in the U.S., families impacted by “zero tolerance” are left to deal with the emotional trauma of their separation -- and a loss of hope that they will be able to escape the violence they fled in the first place.

Note to Editors

●  The Fault Lines episode will premiere online on Tuesday, September 11th.

●  The full show will be available through this link: https://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/faultlines/

●  Follow Fault Lines on Twitter @AJFaultLines

PRESS RELEASES

‘The Palestine Laboratory’ exposes Israel’s export of unique systems of control and surveillance technology around the world
Al Jazeera condemns in the strongest terms the arrest of Mohamad Atrash by the Palestinian Authority and calls for his immediate release
Al Jazeera deplores the Palestinian Authority’s decision to close its office in the West Bank and considers it in line with the occupation’s actions against its staff
Al Jazeera launches global true crime video podcast
Al Jazeera condemns Fatah's incitement campaign against it and holds the Palestinian Authority responsible for the safety of its journalists
Al Jazeera Media Institute sets date for its second annual AI conference
Al Jazeera condemns the targeted killing of journalist Ahmad Al-Louh by the Israeli occupation forces in Gaza
Al Jazeera English’s documentary “A Crude Mistake” wins FPA award
Al Jazeera English wins AIB award for its Gaza coverage
End the Killings: Al Jazeera demands protection for journalists in Gaza
Al Jazeera condemns Israeli accusations towards its journalists in Gaza and warns against being a justification for targeting them
Al Jazeera urges immediate medical evacuation for its injured journalists in Gaza
  • Load More

About

  • About Us
  • Code of Ethics
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Cookie preferences
  • Work for us

Connect

  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with us
  • Apps
  • Channel Finder
  • TV Schedule
  • Podcasts
  • Submit a Tip

Our Channels

  • Al Jazeera Arabic
  • Al Jazeera English
  • Al Jazeera Investigative Unit
  • Al Jazeera Mubasher
  • Al Jazeera Documentary
  • Al Jazeera Balkans
  • AJ +

Our Network

  • Al Jazeera Center for Studies
  • Al Jazeera Media Institute
  • Learn Arabic
  • Al Jazeera Center for Public Liberties & Human Rights
  • Al Jazeera Forum
  • Al Jazeera Hotel Partners
 

© 2025 Al Jazeera Media Network.