TRUMP'S IMMIGRATION CHAOS

A jogger’s ordeal at US-Canada border

Afp, Paris

A French teenager who spent two weeks in US detention after inadvertently crossing the border from Canada while jogging on the beach, yesterday told AFP how she suffered "the fright of my life".

"It's unbelievable," said Cedella Roman, 19.

The story of how she strayed over the border in British Columbia and into the US state of Washington on May 21 broke Friday on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC).

The girl from Briancon in the Alps, said she was headed back when the tide turned and she was apprehended by two US Border Patrol officers who told her she had entered illegally and been caught on camera.

Despite pleading her innocence, Roman was taken off for finger-printing.

"That's when I began to get very afraid. It was like being a big criminal," she told AFP by telephone.

After finishing school, Roman had gone to Canada to visit her mother, who lives in White Rock, and to improve her English, and wasn't carrying identity papers.

She said she was allowed to call her mother who "understood immediately and started to panic".

Overnight, Roman was transferred to the Tacoma Northwest Detention Center, run by the Department of Homeland Security, 200 kilometres (120 miles) to the south.

"I found myself in prison. We were locked up all the time and in the yard there was barbed wire and dogs," she said.

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Roman spent two weeks in a large room filled with about 100 "migrants" and 60 beds.

Her mother Christiane Ferne reached the centre with her passport and study permits after two days.

But red tape took over and employees at the site said the documents would have to be verified by Canadian authorities.

"Since I am not Canadian, it took time" said Roman.

She was finally held for two weeks before the matter was resolved and she was allowed to return to Canada.

All charges against her have been dropped, but she has been banned from travelling to the United States.