Jamaica Gleaner

Record migrant children in US custody

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COMAYAGUA (AP):

THE THREE-YEAR-OLD girl travelled for weeks cradled in her father’s arms as he set out to seek asylum in the United States (US). Now she won’t even look at him.

After being forcibly separated at the border by government officials, sexually abused in United States foster care and deported, the once bright and beaming girl arrived back in Honduras withdrawn, anxious, and angry, convinced her father abandoned her.

He fears their bond is forever broken.

“I think about this trauma staying with her, too, because the trauma has remained with me and still hasn’t faded,” he said, days after their reunion.

This month, new government data show that the little girl is one of an unpreceden­ted 69,550 migrant children held in US government custody over the past year, enough infants, toddlers, kids, and teens to overflow the typical NFL stadium. That’s more children detained away from their parents than any other country, according to United Nations researcher­s. And it’s happening even though the US government has acknowledg­ed that being held in detention can be traumatic for children, putting them at risk of long-term physical and emotional damage.

Some of these migrant children who were in government custody this year have already been deported. Some have reunited with family in the US, where they’re trying to go to school and piece their lives back together. About 4,000 are still in government custody, some in large, impersonal shelters. And more arrive every week.

The nearly 70,000 migrant children who were held in government custody this year – up 42 per cent in fiscal year 2019 from 2018 – spent more time in shelters and away from their families than in prior years. The Trump administra­tion’s series of strict immigratio­n policies has increased the time children spend in detention, despite the government’s own acknowledg­ment that it does them harm. In 2013, Australia detained 2,000 children during a surge of maritime arrivals. In Canada, immigrant children are separated from their parents only as a last resort; 155 were detained in 2018. In the United Kingdom, 42 migrant children were put in shelters in 2017, according to officials in those countries.

“Early experience­s are literally built into our brains and bodies,” said Dr Jack Shonkoff, who directs Harvard University’s Center on the Developing Child. Earlier this year, he told Congress that “decades of peer-reviewed research” show that detaining kids away from parents or primary caregivers is bad for their health. It’s a brain-wiring issue, he said.

“Stable and responsive relationsh­ips promote healthy brain architectu­re,” Shonkoff said. “If these relationsh­ips are disrupted, young children are hit by the double whammy of a brain that is deprived of the positive stimulatio­n it needs and assaulted by a stress response that disrupts its developing circuitry.”

 ?? AP ?? In this October 11, 2019, photo, José Fernando Guillén Rodríguez, 21 (left), practises building circuits with another student around a workbench in San Salvador, El Salvador. “I don’t think about migrating anymore,” said Rodríguez, who was apprehende­d in the US at 18 and spent time in adult detention before being deported. Now he’s completed a year of daily electrical classes and works as an apprentice at an electrical constructi­on company.
AP In this October 11, 2019, photo, José Fernando Guillén Rodríguez, 21 (left), practises building circuits with another student around a workbench in San Salvador, El Salvador. “I don’t think about migrating anymore,” said Rodríguez, who was apprehende­d in the US at 18 and spent time in adult detention before being deported. Now he’s completed a year of daily electrical classes and works as an apprentice at an electrical constructi­on company.

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