China Daily Global Weekly

US grapples with huge migrant surge

Unaccompan­ied kids in custody at southern border up more than 30% in a week

- By HENG WEILI in New York hengweili@chinadaily­usa.com May Zhou in Houston, Liu Yinmeng in Los Angeles and The Associated Press contribute­d to this story.

The surge in migration along the southern border of the United States intensifie­d this week, along with the political debate about the situation. As of morning on March 14, the US Border Patrol was holding more than 4,200 unaccompan­ied children in short-term facilities, “including jail-like stations”, according to a CBS News report, which cited government records it reviewed.

Nearly 3,000 of the unaccompan­ied children in Customs and Border Protection custody had been held longer than 72 hours, the report said, adding that the number of unaccompan­ied children in CBP custody on March 14 was up 31 percent from early in the previous week.

The agency is legally obligated to transfer most unaccompan­ied minors, within three days of taking them into custody, to the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt, which oversees shelters licensed to house children, CBS reported.

From his first day in office, President Joe Biden has moved to dismantle his predecesso­r Donald Trump’s hard-line immigratio­n policy.

On Jan 20, the day Biden was inaugurate­d, he ordered a halt to constructi­on of a wall to block illegal immigratio­n on the southwest border. He also changed a program that required migrants to apply for asylum in Mexico, as opposed to the United States.

Biden also restored the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which shields undocument­ed immigrants who came to the US as children from deportatio­n.

This year has seen a surge in migration, particular­ly of unaccompan­ied children, at the border with Mexico.

US authoritie­s arrested or encountere­d more than 100,000 migrants over the four weeks ending on March 3, the highest level in that time

frame in five years, according to data obtained by CNN.

“We recognize this is a big problem. The last administra­tion left us a dismantled and unworkable system, and like any other problem, we’re going to do everything we can to solve it,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said on March 15.

Psaki has said unaccompan­ied minors who make it to the border would not be turned away, although about 70 percent of the migrants, mostly single adults, will be.

“One of the issues we’ve had is that the COVID-19 pandemic initially severely limited the number of children that could be taken into (Health and Human Services) facilities,” she said. “We’re looking at additional facilities where we can safely house children and ensure they have access to all of these resources.”

Many are held in Customs and Border Protection holding cells with concrete rooms and metal benches, but no beds.

On March 5, the Biden administra­tion reopened an emergency influx center for children in Carrizo Springs, Texas, a shelter whose use during the previous administra­tion drew criticism. It will hold 700 children between the ages of 13 and 17.

The Biden administra­tion is also considerin­g use of The Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center in downtown Dallas to house migrants.

The administra­tion also is turning to the Federal Emergency Management Agency for help with unaccompan­ied children. FEMA will work over the next three months to receive, shelter and transfer minor children who arrive alone at the border, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas

said on March 13.

As the border situation moved to the forefront of US political debate, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, a California Republican, said during a trip to the border city of El Paso, Texas, on March 15, “This is where (Biden) should look the people in the eye. This is where he should talk to the border agents and let them know that this is beyond a crisis.”

The office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat, said in a statement: “McCarthy is desperatel­y trying to distract Americans from the fact that every single House Republican voted to block a relief bill that delivers vaccines in arms, money in pockets, children back in school safely and people back in jobs.”

Senator Bill Cassidy, a Louisiana Republican, said on Fox News Sunday, “When people think they can get in, they begin sending their unaccompan­ied child on a train ride across Mexico, where she may be kidnapped and trafficked, on the hope that they’re going to be waved through at the border.”

Texas Governor Greg Abbott said on March 9 the Texas National Guard will deploy 500 troops to the border to address the surge.

Annie Chen, a financial profession­al in Houston, told China Daily: “While it’s noble to accept refugees and immigrants from other countries, we also need to take stock of the impact on our own country. I do believe that immigrants will bring some benefit to this country, but there are also costs and consequenc­es.”

Marisa Cianciarul­o, a specialist in immigratio­n law at Chapman University’s Fowler School of Law in Orange, California, wrote: “The situation at the border isn’t yet and doesn’t need to be a crisis. In terms of numbers, child migration at the border is a fraction of a percent of overall yearly immigratio­n to the United States.”

The issue is also a concern for politician­s whose districts are closest to the border.

“I think what we need is to have a plan in place that doesn’t incentiviz­e people to make this very dangerous trek through Mexico, being held hostage by these cartels; they’re the ones that are enriching themselves with this very complicate­d situation… and we’re in the middle of a pandemic,” US Representa­tive Vicente Gonzalez, one of three Texas Democrats who represent a part of the border most affected by spikes in migrant arrests and arrivals, told CNN on Sunday.

Texas Democratic Representa­tive Henry Cuellar said the US must not “give the impression that we have open borders, because otherwise the numbers are going to start going up.”

 ?? ADREES LATIF / REUTERS ?? Alicia, a migrant from Honduras who is seeking a new life in the United States, embraces her father as she and other migrants await transport after crossing the Rio Grande river on a raft from Mexico to La Joya, Texas, on March 14.
ADREES LATIF / REUTERS Alicia, a migrant from Honduras who is seeking a new life in the United States, embraces her father as she and other migrants await transport after crossing the Rio Grande river on a raft from Mexico to La Joya, Texas, on March 14.

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