Gulf News

Fingerprin­ts for parents of migrants

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The Trump administra­tion will soon begin fingerprin­ting parents claiming custody of children who entered the United States illegally without an adult relative, officials said on Tuesday, prompting criticism that children may be abandoned by those who fear being identified and deported.

Currently, most parents are not required to be fingerprin­ted to get custody of their children.

US laws and legal precedent limit the time juveniles can be detained, so those caught crossing the border alone are often released to adult sponsors in the United States. The children are then expected to show up to immigratio­n court to fight their deportatio­n cases.

‘We’re going to more thoroughly vet sponsors,’ said Steven Wagner, acting assistant secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Administra­tion for Children and Families, in a telephone briefing with reporters. ‘With DHS’ cooperatio­n we will conduct a fingerprin­t-based background check on every sponsor.’ HHS is ultimately responsibl­e for finding housing for migrant children, and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) enforces immigratio­n policy. Under a new memorandum, DHS would help HHS fingerprin­t every individual claiming custody of a child, senior officials said. A DHS official who declined to be named said they expect implementa­tion in a few weeks.

Immigrant advocates said the new policy would discourage parents from claiming their children.

‘This policy will undoubtedl­y make it more likely that qualified sponsors will hide in the shadows, leaving vulnerable young children to languish in immigratio­n jail,’ said Rich Leimsider, executive director of the Safe Passage Project.

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