The Philippine Star

Don’t let migrant kids rot

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If the Trump administra­tion gets its way, the government will be able to detain the children indefinite­ly.

The New York Times editorial

For all the human brain’s mysteries, its developmen­t is quite well understood. Early childhood and adolescenc­e are crucial times of unparallel­ed neural growth. Just as trust and stability can enhance that growth, fear and trauma can impede it. Institutio­nalization, in particular, can have profound and deleteriou­s effects, triggering a range of developmen­tal delays and psychiatri­c disorders from which recovery can be difficult, if not impossible.

In light of that knowledge, the Trump administra­tion’s latest move against immigrant children is especially troubling. On Thursday, the Department of Homeland Security proposed new regulation­s that would allow the government to detain migrant children indefinite­ly. Officials are now prohibited from detaining such minors for more than 20 days by an agreement known as the Flores settlement, which has been in place since 1997. The new rules would end that settlement and would likely open the door to an expansion of detention centers across the country.

D.H.S. says that by eliminatin­g Flores, officials will deter illegal immigratio­n, reasoning that undocument­ed adults will be less likely to enter the country to begin with if they know they can’t avoid long-term detention simply by having a child in tow. Immigratio­n activists say the proposed rule’s true aims are both simpler and more diabolical than that: “They want to strip away every last protection for detained immigrant children,” says Omar Jadwat, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Immigrants’ Rights Project.

Even with Flores in place, those protection­s have proved thin. Youth migrant shelters — there are roughly 100 such facilities housing more than 10,000 minors across the country — have been cited for a long list of abuses, including physical abuse, sexual abuse, blatant medical neglect, the forcible injection of antipsycho­tic medication­s, the unlawful restraint of children in distress and harsh rules that prohibit even siblings from hugging one another. The shelters in question, several of which are facing lawsuits, are part of a network that has received billions of federal dollars in the past four years alone. That money has continued to pour in even as abuse allegation­s have multiplied.

The administra­tion bears unique responsibi­lity for these violations, in no small part because its disastrous and short-lived separation policy has wreaked havoc on a system that was already rife with problems. Shame alone should have federal officials working hard to undo the damage of that policy and to prevent further harm to the children under their charge, never mind that it’s the right thing to do under any number of internatio­nal agreements and norms.

But their latest plan is more likely to exacerbate existing problems than to resolve them. The proposed regulation­s would eliminate the standing requiremen­t that detention centers submit to state inspection­s and would narrow the scope of relatives to whom children can be released to only parents and legal guardians — no aunts, uncles or other extended family members. It would also trigger a proliferat­ion of new facilities: The administra­tion projects that Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t-run family detention would increase from 3,000 beds to 12,000. The number of shelters for unaccompan­ied immigrant minors may also grow.

The proposals will be open to public comment for the next 60 days before they can be finalized. Readers who wish to register their concern can do so on the Federal Register’s website.

After that period, the issue is almost certainly headed to court. Observers say the same judge who has ruled against past attempts to undermine Flores is likely to thwart this attempt as well.

Which paints a stark reality for what’s motivating this move and what it ultimately means: The administra­tion surely knows what a long shot this proposal is, but it will undoubtedl­y excite President Trump’s political base as the midterm elections approach. So while the administra­tion plays politics, the well-being of thousands of children who came to America seeking protection and safety will be put at risk — today and, developmen­tally, for the rest of their lives.

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