Chattanooga Times Free Press

Migrants send kids into U.S. alone

- BY ADRIANA GOMEZ LICON

LA JOYA, Texas — Marely had traveled for 13 days, trekking with her mother from Central America to the busiest corridor for illegal U.S.-Mexico border crossings. Then, as the 12-yearold Salvadoran girl got on an inflatable raft to cross the Rio Grande in Texas in the middle of the night, she discovered her mom wasn’t coming with her.

Her mom told her that she loved her very much right before the boat got pushed into the water.

“I thought she had already gotten on, but she hadn’t,” Marely told The Associated Press last week, tears rolling down her cheeks.

But she didn’t scream or ask the smugglers to go back and get her mother.

“I knew she was on the other side. There was no going back. They told us to run, to keep going,” said Marely, who turned herself over to Border Patrol agents in La Joya, Texas.

The AP is not using the girl’s last name. It does not normally name children

without permission from their parents, and the identity of her parents could not be obtained.

Growing numbers of migrant families are making the heart-wrenching decision to separate from their children and send them into America alone. Many families with kids older than 6 have been quickly expelled from the country under federal pandemic-related powers that don’t allow migrants to seek asylum. But they know that President Joe Biden’s administra­tion is allowing unaccompan­ied children to stay in

the U.S. while their cases are decided.

Forced out of the country, they are sending their older children, like Marely, back to cross alone. These self-separation­s mean children arrive in the United States confused and in distress. Many have traveled hundreds of miles with their parents without understand­ing why they can’t cross the last stretch together.

Once in the U.S., Marely joined two teenagers traveling without their parents and a larger group of families fleeing poverty, storm devastatio­n and violence in their homelands.

Marely’s mother had her memorize the full name and number for her grandmothe­r in Washington, D.C., who told the AP she was expecting to receive her granddaugh­ter.

As more families decide to send their children alone, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas has been pressed by lawmakers about the possibilit­y that expulsions could be a “new source of family separation.” It follows widespread outrage over former President Donald Trump’s “zero tolerance” policy that forced apart families on the border, some of whom still haven’t been reunited.

Mayorkas has defended speedy family expulsions, saying they protect both the American public and migrants. He said officials are “hearing anecdotall­y” of families who self-separate and added that about 40% of unaccompan­ied children have a parent or legal guardian in the U.S. and 50% have other relatives who can take care of them after they are released from government custody.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GREGORY BULL ?? Marely, 12, of El Salvador, cries as she waits to be processed by authoritie­s after turning herself in upon crossing the U.S -Mexico border Tuesday in La Joya, Texas.
AP PHOTO/GREGORY BULL Marely, 12, of El Salvador, cries as she waits to be processed by authoritie­s after turning herself in upon crossing the U.S -Mexico border Tuesday in La Joya, Texas.

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