The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Close to 1,000 migrant children separated by Trump yet to be reunited with parents

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WASHINGTON — Nearly 1,000 migrant children separated at the U.s.-mexico border by the administra­tion of former President Donald Trump have yet to be reunited with their parents despite a two-year effort by President Joe Biden.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said on Thursday of the 998 children still separated, 148 were in the process of reunificat­ion.

Biden, a Democrat, issued an executive order shortly after taking office in January 2021 that establishe­d a task force to reunite children separated from their families under Trump, a Republican and immigratio­n hardliner, calling such separation­s a “human tragedy.”

The Trump administra­tion split apart thousands of migrant families under a blanket “zero-tolerance” policy that called for the prosecutio­n of all unauthoriz­ed border crossers in spring 2018. Government watchdogs and advocates have found the separation­s began before and continued after the policy’s official start.

DHS said the task force’s painstakin­g work of combing through “patchwork” informatio­n kept by the Trump administra­tion on the policy had so far found 3,924, mostly Central American, children were separated at the border.

Many were located and reunified before Biden took office through a court process after the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) sued to halt the separation policy.

“The number of new families identified continues to increase, as families come forward and identify themselves,” DHS said in a fact sheet on the work of the task force released Thursday. To date the task force has reunited 600 families.

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