The Borneo Post

Judge extends deadline for reuniting migrant children

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LOS ANGELES: A US judge on Monday gave the government more time to reunite migrant children aged five or younger with their parents separated as a consequenc­e of a ‘zero tolerance’ policy, US media reported.

The decision came after a government lawyer said around half of the 102 young children could be placed back with their parents by the previously given deadline of Tuesday.

They are among more than 2,300 children split up from their families as a consequenc­e of the ‘ zero tolerance’ practice that saw their parents prosecuted for illegally crossing the border, even if they did so to seek asylum.

Many are fleeing gang violence and poverty in Central America.

Following domestic and global outcry over the separation­s, in which some children were kept in chain-link enclosures, Trump ended the practice on June 20.

The problem is that this meant children had to be kept with their detained parents.

So the Justice Department asked a federal judge to amend a 1997 ruling that children could not be held for more than 20 days while their parents are in court proceeding­s.

But this judge, Dolly Gee, ruled late Monday, after the deadline extension, that she rejected the idea of keeping unauthoriz­ed migrant kids in custody indefinite­ly as the government sought. She said the kids were blameless and such an arrangemen­t was not in their best interest.

The New York Times reported late last week that, under pressure to reunite the families, authoritie­s were struggling to connect them after records linking children to their parents disappeare­d and in some cases were destroyed, though not as part of a deliberate attempt to obfuscate.

At the hearing in San Diego, Judge Dana Sabraw gave the authoritie­s extra time to determine which children will be back with their parents, as government lawyer Sarah Fabian said 54 of the youngsters could be reunited by the Tuesday deadline, the US media reports said.

Sabraw previously ordered that thousands more children aged five and older should be back together with their parents by July 26, but Monday’s hearing did not touch on their cases.

The government on Friday asked for an extension of the deadline, saying it needed more time to find and confirm the identities of the children and parents.

That prompted the court to order the government to submit a list of children younger than five, and it do so over the weekend, the ACLU said, by presenting the list of 102 children. — AFP

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