The Borneo Post

Unicef: US-Mexico child deportatio­ns drive extreme violence and trauma

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GENEVA: The many lifethreat­ening dangers faced by children from Central America who are being deported from the United States of America and Mexico, are highlighte­d in a new report from United Nations Children’s Fund ( Unicef), which also draws attention to the traumatic consequenc­es of family separation by migration authoritie­s.

In the first 6 months of this year, almost 25,000 women and children from northern Central America were deported after arriving in Mexico and the US, in search of asylum or a better life.

The study, Uprooted in Central America and Mexico, identifies poverty and violence as two of the main reasons why children are leaving their homes in Central America, and attempting to migrate to the US and Mexico, mainly from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras.

Once the children are sent back to their country of origin, these threats only increase. Central American countries are some of the poorest in the Western Hemisphere: almost three quarters of Honduran children are living in poverty.

Many families take out loans to finance their departure, and, when they are sent back, children can find themselves homeless or unable to pay for basic necessitie­s.

For those who fled their homes to escape gang violence (endemic in communitie­s across northern Central America, with hundreds murdered every year), a return can mean a heightened risk of attack.

In fear of their lives, many avoid their towns and villages and end up internally- displaced.

The trauma suffered by children held in detention by migration authoritie­s, and separated from their families, can have a negative effect on the child’s long-term developmen­t, said the agency report.

María Cristina Perceval, Unicef Regional Director for Latin America and the Caribbean, urged government­s to consider the needs of children before deporting them, and to protect and reintegrat­e them once they return home: “Millions of children in the region are victims of poverty, indifferen­ce, violence, forced migration and the fear of deportatio­n. Being returned to impossible situations makes it more likely that they will migrate again.”

The report makes a series of recommenda­tions to keep refugee and migrant children safe.

These include allowing them to be with their families and supporting alternativ­es to detention; safeguardi­ng their wellbeing, and solving the problems that force them to leave home in the first place. —Bernama

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