Jamaica Gleaner

US stops jailing pregnant migrants, reversing Trump policy

- WASHINGTON (AP):

US IMMIGRATIO­N authoritie­s will no longer routinely jail migrants facing deportatio­n if they are pregnant or recently gave birth, reversing a Trump-era immigratio­n policy.

The new directive, announced Friday, does not bar Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE) from initiating proceeding­s to deport women who are pregnant, nursing or have given birth within the past year. But they generally would no longer be detained pending the outcome of their cases except under “exceptiona­l circumstan­ces,” the agency said.

The practice of detaining pregnant migrants has been condemned as a threat to maternal and foetal health by immigrant and women’s advocacy groups critical of medical care at detention centres.

“This reflects our commitment to treat all individual­s with respect and dignity while still enforcing our nation’s laws,” acting ICE Director Tae Johnson said.

The change is part of a broader effort by the Biden administra­tion to roll back Trump-era enforcemen­t measures and return to policies resembling those in place under President Barack Obama. ICE recently adopted draft guidelines to focus apprehensi­ons on people in the United States illegally who recently entered the country, pose a national security threat or have committed serious crimes.

While these efforts have angered immigratio­n opponents, the number of people in immigratio­n custody has risen sharply in recent months. There are more than 27,000 people in ICE custody, up from less than 14,000 at the end of March, according to data compiled by the Transactio­nal Research Access Clearingho­use at Syracuse University.

Nearly 80 per cent of those in ICE custody have no criminal record, and a majority of those who do have committed largely minor offences, according to TRAC.

Advocates praised Friday ’s announceme­nt, but said it doesn’t go far enough. The American Civil Liberties Union called on t he government to stop detaining anyone who might be at risk in detention. “This action by the Biden administra­tion is a welcome step in the right direction,” said Eunice Cho, a senior staff attorney with the organisati­on.

Under Obama, ICE adopted a policy in August 2016 that pregnant migrants would be presumed eligible for release as their cases made their way through immigratio­n courts.

President Donald Trump ended that policy of presumed release, part of his administra­tion’s heightened immigratio­n enforcemen­t, including arrests of anyone without legal residency regardless of whether they had committed some other offence.

The number of pregnant women detained by ICE increased from 1,380 in 2016 to 2,098, according to the Government Accountabi­lity Office.

ICE is required by law to detain some migrants, including foreign nationals who have been convicted of certain crimes or terrorist activity. The agency pledged that the “very limited” number of pregnant women detained under the new policy would receive regular health care as needed, and officials would be prohibited from using restraints on them except in “extraordin­ary circumstan­ces”.

Any child born in the US would automatica­lly have American citizenshi­p.

 ?? AP ?? In this March 30, 2021, file photo Mayra Culio from Guatemala is helped off an inflatable raft by a church volunteer after being smuggled across the Rio Grande river in Roma, Texas. Assailants shot her 7 times at her house and then killed her husband who was ambushed in his car in Escuintla, Guatemala. She is five months pregnant and fled with her extended family March 12 after being treated in the hospital for her bullet wounds. The Biden administra­tion will stop detaining migrants facing deportatio­n if they are pregnant or recently gave birth in a reversal of a Trump-era policy.
AP In this March 30, 2021, file photo Mayra Culio from Guatemala is helped off an inflatable raft by a church volunteer after being smuggled across the Rio Grande river in Roma, Texas. Assailants shot her 7 times at her house and then killed her husband who was ambushed in his car in Escuintla, Guatemala. She is five months pregnant and fled with her extended family March 12 after being treated in the hospital for her bullet wounds. The Biden administra­tion will stop detaining migrants facing deportatio­n if they are pregnant or recently gave birth in a reversal of a Trump-era policy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica