
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In 2018 the US government under President Trump introduced a policy of “Zero Tolerance” at its border with Mexico. Anyone attempting to enter the US without documentation would be prosecuted, even if it was a first offence. If they were travelling with children, their children would be taken from them. The policy was cancelled within weeks but not before thousands of families had been separated. Six years on, several hundred are still to be reunited.
Linda Pressly hears about the pain of separation as experienced by a man from Guatemala; speaks to the people still trying to put families back together; and asks if a new administration might turn again to Zero Tolerance in an attempt to deter would-be migrants to the United States.
By BBC World Service4.3
16071,607 ratings
In 2018 the US government under President Trump introduced a policy of “Zero Tolerance” at its border with Mexico. Anyone attempting to enter the US without documentation would be prosecuted, even if it was a first offence. If they were travelling with children, their children would be taken from them. The policy was cancelled within weeks but not before thousands of families had been separated. Six years on, several hundred are still to be reunited.
Linda Pressly hears about the pain of separation as experienced by a man from Guatemala; speaks to the people still trying to put families back together; and asks if a new administration might turn again to Zero Tolerance in an attempt to deter would-be migrants to the United States.

7,841 Listeners

376 Listeners

1,075 Listeners

5,492 Listeners

968 Listeners

588 Listeners

1,845 Listeners

2,033 Listeners

363 Listeners

605 Listeners

974 Listeners

405 Listeners

424 Listeners

734 Listeners

843 Listeners

363 Listeners

1,004 Listeners

3,217 Listeners

1,042 Listeners

773 Listeners

1,044 Listeners

371 Listeners