Iran Daily

US government details how separated families will be reunited

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The administra­tion of US President Donald Trump is releasing its plan for putting back together the thousands of families it separated at the border — but the reunions won’t happen quickly.

In a release Saturday night, the Department­s of Homeland Security and Health and Human Services said 2,053 children were still in the custody of HHS and awaiting being returned to their parents, CNN wrote.

Under the plan, however, those children will keep waiting in custody, with reunificat­ions only happening once the parents’ deportatio­n proceeding­s are completed. The families will either be reunited before deportatio­n or, if the parent is released from detention, after the parent applies to serve as the child’s sponsor under HHS rules.

As part of the reunificat­ion effort, the government is building out better organized databases linking the parent and children’s informatio­n and whereabout­s and working to better facilitate communicat­ion between them, the fact sheet said.

The guidance came days after Trump abruptly reversed course on his administra­tion’s decision to refer all adults caught crossing the border illegally for prosecutio­n, including those with children — a decision that resulted in more 2,500 children being taken away from their parents in the almost two months it was in place.

DHS said that 522 had been reunited since the policy began, with 16 more reunions in process delayed due to weather.

But Trump’s executive order on Wednesday telling his administra­tion to keep families together only added to the confusion at first — as the order seemed impossible to actually put in place. In the wake of the order, guidance obtained by CNN showed that the US Border Patrol would stop referring parents for prosecutio­n until further notice.

The move follows days of fallout caused by the President’s reversal, which happened suddenly. Thursday into Friday, officials across the administra­tion huddled intensely within agencies and across agencies trying to work out how, exactly, the order would be implemente­d.

On Friday, DHS had already reunited any children that were still in its custody with their parents — a smaller group that had likely been separated within the last three days and had yet to be transferre­d to HHS care. But the future of the thousands already affected remained in limbo.

Under the plan, children will be reunited with their parents based on the result of their parents’ immigratio­n proceeding­s. In the meantime, parents will continue to be detained by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t pending an immigratio­n judge’s decision on their right to stay in the US, and the children will remain with HHS. Keeping the adult detained means their immigratio­n court case moves more quickly.

If a judge decides that the immigrant may have a claim to pursue and the immigrant is deemed eligible for release, the parent can apply as a sponsor for their child in HHS custody.

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GETTY IMAGES

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