El Dorado News-Times

1-year-old separated from dad will return to Honduras soon

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PHOENIX (AP) — A Honduran 1-year-old who was separated from his father at the U.S.-Mexico border and who took his first steps at a shelter for immigrant children will soon be reunited with his parents, according to the country's consulate office in Dallas.

The Honduran consulate confirmed it is working closely with U.S. authoritie­s to get the child back to his parents in Honduras within the next few days. The consular officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the matter.

The boy, Johan, faced an immigratio­n judge without his parents last week in a case that garnered internatio­nal attention.

The calm, quiet boy was dressed neatly in a button-up shirt, pants and dress shoes at immigratio­n court in Phoenix on July 6.

He played with a purple ball, drank milk from a bottle with his name affixed to it and asked for "agua" during the hour-plus hearing. Toward the end of the hearing, his shoes had come off.

The judge, John W. Richardson, expressed misgivings about the case.

"I'm embarrasse­d to ask it, because I don't know who you would explain it to, unless you think that a 1-yearold could learn immigratio­n law," Richardson told the lawyer representi­ng the 1-year-old boy.

The boy's lawyer asked for a voluntary departure order that allows the U.S. government to fly him back to Honduras. Richardson granted it.

Johan took his first steps at a government-contracted shelter about two weeks ago, said Pamela Florian, an attorney at the Florence Project in Arizona. The Florence Project is handling his case.

Johan is one of hundreds of children who have been separated from their parents, many because of a Trump administra­tion policy to prosecute anyone who crosses the border illegally.

A federal judge in San Diego gave the government until July 10 to reunite all children under 5 with their parents and until July 26 to reunite the rest. Authoritie­s say they have only reunited about half of the approximat­ely 100 kids under 5.

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