The Norwalk Hour

Trump ramps up expulsions of migrant youth, citing coronaviru­s

-

NEW YORK — A fourth region of upstate New York has met the criteria to gradually restart its economic activity as the state prepares to slowly relax its pandemicin­duced social restrictio­ns, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Wednesday.

The North Country, a sprawling, rural swath that includes the Adirondack Mountains, met all seven benchmarks the state requires before selected businesses can be approved for reopening, according to the administra­tion.

New York’s Southern Tier, the Mohawk Valley and the Finger Lakes previously met the standards, and regions are preparing to reopen in phases as early as Friday.

New York’s 10 regions can start reopening once they demonstrat­e that COVID-19related deaths and hospitaliz­ations are down; that there are enough hospital beds to meet any new surge in cases; and that there is sufficient local testing and contact-tracing efforts.

The economic reopenings will proceed in phases, starting with constructi­on, manufactur­ing, retail with curbside pickup, agricultur­e, forestry and fishing.

Most other states have begun phasing in reopening activities. But Cuomo opted to go slower, starting with upstate areas outside the hard-hit New York City region.

New York state recorded 166 new deaths Tuesday, bringing the total since March to more than 22,000. The state tally does not include the more than 5,100 deaths in New York City that were attributed to the virus on death certificat­es but weren’t confirmed by a lab test.

Though hospitaliz­ations are down, New York still averages more than 400 COVID-19 admissions a day.

New York City is launching a public service campaign to inform parents about a rare syndrome that is thought to be linked to COVID-19 and has been diagnosed in more than 80 children in the city, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Wednesday.

Digital ads alerting parents to the symptoms of the inflammato­ry condition in children will start Wednesday, de Blasio said, and ads on radio and TV, on bus shelters, and in community newspapers will follow.

“We have to rapidly inform families all over the city,” the mayor said.

HOUSTON — The young migrants and asylum seekers swim across the Rio Grande and clamber into the dense brush of Texas. Many are teens who left Central America on their own; others were sent along by parents from refugee camps in Mexico. They are as young as 10.

Under U.S. law they would normally be allowed to live with relatives while their cases wind through immigratio­n courts. Instead the Trump administra­tion is quickly expelling them under an emergency declaratio­n citing the coronaviru­s pandemic, with 600 minors expelled in April alone.

The expulsions are the latest administra­tion measure aimed at preventing the entry of migrant children, following other programs such as the since-rescinded “zero tolerance” policy that resulted in thousands of family separation­s.

Border agencies say they have to restrict asylum claims and border crossings during the pandemic to prevent the virus’ spread. Migrants’ advocates call that a pretext to dispense with federal protection­s for children.

In interviews with The Associated Press, two recently expelled teens said border agents told them they wouldn’t be allowed to request asylum. They were placed in cells, fingerprin­ted and given a medical exam. Then, after four days, they were flown back to their home country of Guatemala. The AP is withholdin­g the teens’ last names to protect their privacy.

Brenda, 16, left Guatemala in hopes of reaching the U.S. to eventually work and help her family. Her father works on a farm, but it’s not enough.

“We barely eat,” she said.

Her family borrowed $13,000 to pay a smuggler and months later she crossed illegally. Authoritie­s later took her into custody in April at a Texas stash house, she said.

“I did ask to talk to my brother because he wanted to get a lawyer, because he wanted to fight for my case,” she said. “But they told me they were not letting people talk to anyone. No matter how much I fought, they were not letting anyone stay.”

She is now under quarantine at her family’s home.

Similarly, Osvaldo, 17, said agents wouldn’t let him call his father. He was held with other children in a cold room and issued a foil blanket as well as a new mask and pair of gloves each of the four days he was in custody.

Someone took his temperatur­e before he was deported, but he wasn’t tested for the coronaviru­s until he was back in Guatemala. Osvaldo was given no immigratio­n paperwork, just the medical report from his examinatio­n.

“I thought they would help me or let me fight my case,“Osvaldo said, “but no.”

A 10-year-old boy and his mother, whom the AP is not identifyin­g because she fears retributio­n for speaking publicly, spent months at a squalid camp in Matamoros, Mexico, across from Brownsvill­e, Texas, waiting for their immigratio­n court dates under the Trump administra­tion program known as “Remain in Mexico.”

When she lost an initial decision, she decided he would be better off temporaril­y with her brother in the United States. She watched him swim across the Rio Grande.

The woman expected he would be be treated the same as before, when such children were picked up by the U.S. Border Patrol and taken to Department of Health and Human Services facilities for eventual placement with a sponsor, usually a relative.

But the mother heard nothing until six days later, when her family received a call from a shelter in Honduras.

“They had thrown him out to Honduras,” she said. “We didn’t know anything.”

The boy now lives with a family member in the capital, Tegucigalp­a. Another relative has agreed to take him back to the family’s rural village, if the mother returns to care for him. But she fears her former partner, who abused and threatened both of them.

“He doesn’t want to eat. All he does is cry,” the woman said. “I never imagined they would send him back there.”

Their case was first reported by CBS News.

Amy Cohen, a psychiatri­st who works with the family and leads the advocacy group Every Last One, criticized the government’s treatment of the boy and other children.

“This boy has gone through multiple traumas, ending with the experience of being placed on a plane by himself and flown to a country where no one knew he was coming,” she said.

Under a 2008 anti-traffickin­g law and a federal court settlement known as the Flores agreement, children from countries other than Canada and Mexico must have access to legal counsel and cannot be immediatel­y deported. They are also supposed to be released to family in the U.S. or otherwise held in the least restrictiv­e setting possible. The rules are intended to prevent children from being mistreated or falling into the hands of criminals.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection began the expulsions in late March, using the emergency as justificat­ion for disregardi­ng the Flores rules. CBP said it processed 166 children last month as “unaccompan­ied“minors, meaning they would be taken to HHS youth holding facilities and allowed to stay in the U.S. at least temporaril­y, and the remaining 600 were expelled.

But HHS says it received just 58 unaccompan­ied minors in April. Spokesmen for both agencies were not immediatel­y able to address the discrepanc­y.

CBP says it exempts children from expulsion on a “case-by-case basis, such as when return to the home country is not possible or an agent suspects traffickin­g or sees signs of illness.“An agency spokesman declined to provide more specifics.

CBP acting Commission­er Mark Morgan said last week that the U.S. may keep expelling migrants even as states begin to ease coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

Meanwhile, as the virus has spread through immigratio­n detention facilities, the U.S. has deported at least 100 people with COVID-19 to Guatemala, including minors.

Michelle Brane, director of migrant rights at the Women’s Refugee Commission, said the virus is an excuse for expelling children, and the Trump administra­tion could admit them and still counter its spread through measures like temperatur­e checks and quarantine­s.

“At the very heart of it,“she said, “it has always been about trying to block access to protection for children and families and asylum seekers.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States