Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Administra­tion report denounces impact of separating kids

- By Noah Bierman noah.bierman@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — The practice of separating children from their parents and detaining them received scathing criticism Thursday from an unlikely source: the Trump administra­tion.

A new 68-page report on internatio­nal human traffickin­g, unveiled by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo during a ceremony with Ivanka Trump at the State Department, devotes two pages to withering condemnati­on of separating families. The harmful “physical and psychologi­cal effects of staying in residentia­l institutio­ns,” it said, put children at additional risk of human traffickin­g.

“The internatio­nal community agrees that a family caregiving setting, or an alternativ­e solution that is appropriat­e and culturally sensitive, is the most conducive environmen­t for the growth, well-being, and safety of children,” the report states.

It added: “Removal of a child from the family should only be considered as a temporary, last resort.”

Though the report was prepared before the administra­tion began its family separation policy in May, its findings were certain to be viewed as an indictment of Trump’s policy.

More than 2,000 children remain in custody, separate from their parents, and a federal court has ordered the government to quickly reunite the families. However, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said this week that many will remain detained.

The State Department report cites studies finding “both private and government-run residentia­l institutio­ns for children” cannot “replicate the emotional companions­hip and attention found in family environmen­ts that are prerequisi­tes to healthy cognitive developmen­t.”

Human rights activists, who have joined in the chorus of criticism of Trump’s policy, could hardly believe what they were reading.

“The State Department deserves credit for its comprehens­ive exposition on the horrors of institutio­nalizing children, detailing how removing children from family caregiving settings causes long-term emotional harm and mental health effects, and heightens risks of human traffickin­g,” said John Sifton of Human Rights Watch.

“We hope Ms. Trump and Secretary Pompeo can share it with other federal agencies and brief them about it,” he added.

A senior State Department official, who demanded anonymity, said that children being detained in U.S. facilities are screened to protect them from human traffickin­g. But the official directed specific questions about the wellbeing of children “to our colleagues in the Department of Health and Human Services that oversee the care of children in their care — in institutio­ns.”

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