Thursday, June 11, 2026
ADVT 
International

Pramila Jayapal Arrested For Protesting Against Trump’s Border Policy

IANS, 29 Jun, 2018 01:09 PM
  • Pramila Jayapal Arrested For Protesting Against Trump’s Border Policy
Indian-American Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal was arrested along with 575 other women during a protest staged here against US President Donald Trump's border and immigration policy.
 
 
Jayapal said she was asked to speak at the demonstration called by women at the Hart Senate Office Building on Thursday, reports The Seattle Times. 
 
 
The civil disobedience was a reaction to the Trump administration's crackdown at the US-Mexico border, including separation of thousands of children from their parents in recent months. 
 
 
"I decided that I, too, would sit down with them and submit to arrest," Jayapal said. 
 
 
"We chanted and sang and talked about the need to reunite these families and to end the President's zero-tolerance policy."
 
 
The women were arrested and charged with unlawfully demonstrating in the Senate office atrium, said Eva Malecki, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Capitol Police.
 
 
Jayapal was issued a $50 fine for "crowding, obstructing, or incommoding". It was her third arrest at a protest, the other two occurring years before her 2016 election to Congress.
 
 
A longtime immigration-rights leader who founded OneAmerica before running for elected office, Jayapal said she has been outraged and unable to sleep over Trump's "zero tolerance" prosecutions of people crossing the US-Mexico border, The Seattle Times reported.
 
 
"I think that every American, Republican and Democrat, just has to try and imagine what that looks like, to have a six-month-old baby taken from your breast," she said.
 
 
Jayapal has also helped organise "Families Belong Together" protests set for Saturday, with demonstrations in Washington, D.C., and other cities across the nation.
 
 
The Trump Administration launched the so-called "zero tolerance" policy in April, which considers illegal border crossing as a criminal offence, meaning that immigrant minors will be separated from their families, reports Efe news.
 
 
Last week, Trump penned an executive order to end family separations at the border due to harsh criticism.
 
 
Since then, the US government has reunited 538 children with their relatives, but more than 2,000 minors still remain separated, according to data from the Department of Homeland Security.

MORE International ARTICLES

1-Year-Old Baby Shot In The Head In UK's Bristol, Remains Critical

1-Year-Old Baby Shot In The Head In UK's Bristol, Remains Critical
Harry Studley remains in a critical condition in Bristol Children's Hospital after being shot on Friday.

1-Year-Old Baby Shot In The Head In UK's Bristol, Remains Critical

Family Of Sikh Leader Killed In Pak Hold Protests, Demand Compensation

Family Of Sikh Leader Killed In Pak Hold Protests, Demand Compensation
Family members of a prominent Pakistani Sikh politician who was gunned down in April today staged a protest demanding that the promises made by the provincial government to the victim's kin be fulfilled.

Family Of Sikh Leader Killed In Pak Hold Protests, Demand Compensation

Muslim Doctor Shot Twice Near A Mosque In US

Muslim Doctor Shot Twice Near A Mosque In US
After parking his car, the victim was waylaid by three suspects. One of the attackers whipped out his gun and shot the doctor near the Mosque, authorities said.

Muslim Doctor Shot Twice Near A Mosque In US

They Were 'Highly Educated Rich Kids': Bangladesh's Ruling Leader's Son Among Dhaka Attackers

They Were 'Highly Educated Rich Kids': Bangladesh's Ruling Leader's Son Among Dhaka Attackers
The son of a senior leader of Bangladesh's ruling Awami League could be one of the seven attackers who hacked to death 20 hostages at a restaurant in the diplomatic enclave here, a media report said today.

They Were 'Highly Educated Rich Kids': Bangladesh's Ruling Leader's Son Among Dhaka Attackers

Auto Sales On Pace For Record, Driven By Popularity Of Light Trucks

Auto Sales On Pace For Record, Driven By Popularity Of Light Trucks
At least once a week, 76-year-old Ken Dacko makes the 200-kilometre round trip from his home in Alma, Ont., to the factory in Brampton, Ont., where he works.

Auto Sales On Pace For Record, Driven By Popularity Of Light Trucks

Aqilah Sandhu, Muslim Woman Wins Right To Wear Headscarf At Work In Germany

Aqilah Sandhu, Muslim Woman Wins Right To Wear Headscarf At Work In Germany
Aqilah Sandhu, a star student at Augsburg University law faculty, began a traineeship with the Bavarian judicial system after completing her state law exams, but was told in a letter that she was not allowed to interrogate witnesses or appear in courtrooms while wearing her headscarf.

Aqilah Sandhu, Muslim Woman Wins Right To Wear Headscarf At Work In Germany