The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Officials hope to reunite Honduran man and son

Dad in Ga., boy in Ariz. as government works to end border separation­s.

- By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com

A 3-year-old boy who was separated from his father amid enforcemen­t of the Trump administra­tion’s “zero-tolerance” border policy has been located by Honduran consulate officials, who are seeking to reunite the two asylum-seekers, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on has learned.

Jose, whose father asked that he and his son’s full names not be published because of the dangers they could face in their homeland, is being held in a government shelter in Glendale, Ariz., said Maria Fernanda Rivera, Honduras’ consul general in Atlanta. His father, also named Jose, is locked up in a federal immigratio­n detention center in South Georgia, where he is awaiting the outcome of his asylum claim.

Meanwhile, the Trump admin- istration announced plans over the weekend to reunite the more than 2,300 children who have been separated during the past two months because their parents have been prosecuted for

illegally crossing the southwest border.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection said it had reunited 522 of the children. As of Wednesday, 2,053 separated boys and girls were being held in federally funded shelters. More than four-fifths of them arrived in the United States without parents or guardians. The rest were separated because of the government’s decision to prosecute their parents. U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t has dedicated its Port Isabel Service Processing Center in Los Fresnos, Texas, as its primary family reunificat­ion and removal center.

“The United States government knows the location of all children in its custody and is working to reunite them with their families,” the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said in a statement. “This process is well coordinate­d.”

In the case of the elder Jose and his son, the two have been separated for more than a month since they were arrested on the U.S.-Mexico border.

The Honduran consulate in Texas tracked the boy to Glendale, Rivera said, and has contacted the shelter and the federal Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt “so we can reunite the family ASAP.” The AJC contacted Rivera about Jose’s whereabout­s last week before publishing an article about his family’s separation in the newspaper’s Sunday print edition.

Jose, 27, said he left Honduras with his son after receiving death threats from a member of a criminal group who killed two of his uncles and a cousin. Since 2010, Honduras has had one of the highest murder rates in the world, according to the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Diplomatic Security. Last month, Jose and his son were detained and then separated after seeking asylum at a port of entry in Hidalgo, Texas.

On Sunday, one of the attorneys helping Jose with his asylum case in Georgia welcomed the news that Honduran consulate officials had located his son and were seeking to reconnect them. But she wondered how that will happen, given that the father is being held at the Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin.

“Until they release him from adult immigratio­n detention, it’s unclear how they can make reunificat­ion happen,” said Michelle Lapointe, acting deputy legal director of the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Immigrant Justice Project. “And that’s part of the larger issue of the two different federal agencies not coordinati­ng and not communicat­ing and that it takes individual advocates, lawyers or, in this case, the consulate of the immigrant’s home country to move things along.”

The Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt, a branch of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, did not respond Sunday to a request for comment about Jose’s son. That agency is holding immigrant children in a network of about 100 shelters across 17 states. The one in Glendale is run by an Austin-based nonprofit called Southwest Key Programs, which also operates programs in Georgia and five other states.

A spokesman for the nonprofit declined to confirm whether Jose’s son is at its Glendale center, citing privacy reasons. But he said Southwest seeks to immediatel­y reunify families.

“As a licensed child care center,” Southwest Key spokesman Jeff Eller said in an email, “we provide every child with compassion­ate care, high quality and culturally appropriat­e meals, counseling and medical care.”

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