The Borneo Post

US to up protection in face of migrant surge

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EL PASO, United States: The United States will take ‘extraordin­ary’ protective measures to deal with a surge of immigrant children in custody, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said Wednesday after a second Guatemalan child died in custody.

Nielsen plans to travel later this week to the Mexico border region to witness medical screenings and conditions at Border Patrol stations, she said in a statement, as Congress and Donald Trump remain deadlocked over the president’s demands for billions of dollars to fund a wall along the border.

“In response to the unpreceden­ted surge of children into our custody, I have directed a series of extraordin­ary protective measures,” she said in a statement after the ‘deeply concerning and heartbreak­ing’ death of the child.

Nielsen has asked experts from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to investigat­e ‘the uptick in sick children crossing our borders’ and to identify what further steps border hospitals should take in preparatio­n, her statement said.

Nielsen added that she has asked the US Coast Guard medical corps to assess and ‘make appropriat­e recommenda­tions’ about Border Patrol medical programs, and has sought additional medical profession­als from the Department of Defense.

US Customs and Border Protection Commission­er Kevin McAleenan warned Wednesday that the agency was unable to cope with the thousands of arrivals, as most facilities were built decades ago for men arriving alone.

“We need help from Congress. We need to budget for medical care and mental health care for children in our facilities,” he told CBS News.

Eight-year- old Felipe Gomez, who collapsed after running a fever, was among almost 25,000 migrant children in US custody, according to McAleenan — the greatest number ever recorded.

“That’s an enormous flow. That’s very different from what we’ve seen before,” he said, adding that the onset of the f lu season was putting further pressure on health care services.

In the last two months, Border Patrol has apprehende­d 139,817 people on the southwest border, compared with 74,946 during the same period a year earlier, Nielsen said.

More than 68,500 were ‘ family units’ while almost 14,000 others were unaccompan­ied children, she said, and the system has been pushed to ‘breaking point.’

Augusto Mendoza, a Guatemalan migrant in El Paso with his one-year- old son, told AFP he would ‘ never’ consider making the journey again.

“It’s been very, very hard. I would never think about doing it again, I regret it for my son,” said Mendoza, who was separated from his wife at the border and released from detention on Christmas Day.

DHS officials said all children in border patrol custody would be given a thorough medical screening, reaffirmin­g McAleenan’s commitment to “secondary medical checks” with a focus on those under 10.

And Guatemala has called for an investigat­ion into the boy’s death, which came just three weeks after a seven-year- old girl from the country died in similar circumstan­ces.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? File photo shows a caravan of nearly seven thousand migrants from Central America walk towards Tapachula from Ciudad Hidalgo while en route to the United States, in Frontera Hidalgo, Mexico.
— Reuters photo File photo shows a caravan of nearly seven thousand migrants from Central America walk towards Tapachula from Ciudad Hidalgo while en route to the United States, in Frontera Hidalgo, Mexico.

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