The Trump administration's deadline to reunite immigrant children is less than a week away and thousands are still separated

Get the Full StoryAssociated Press Ross D. Franklin

The Trump administration said in court documents it has reunited 364 immigrant children over the age of five who were separated from their parents.

More than 2,000 remain separated, and the government must reunite them before July 26.

Immigrant advocates have expressed fears that the government will try to deport families before they've had access to proper legal counsel.

The Trump administration said Thursday evening it has reunited 364 immigrant children between the ages of five and 17 who were separated from their parents under its "zero tolerance" immigration policy.

But more than 2,000 children remain separated, and the government is quickly running out of time to reunite them before a court-imposed July 26 deadline.See the rest of the story at Business InsiderNOW WATCH: Here's why the US Men's team sucks at soccerSee Also:'Dog cages,' dirty water, and freezing temperatures: Immigrants describe squalid conditions at border facilitiesA federal judge just ordered the Trump administration to pay immigrant families' reunification costs and a government lawyer called it 'a huge ask'ICE left an immigrant mother and her 6-month-old infant stranded at a bus stop after reuniting them, lawyers allege

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