The Star Malaysia

2,053 kids still separated

US govt working to reunite foreign children with families

-

WASHINGTON: The US government said it still had 2,053 children in its custody who were separated from their parents under President Donald Trump’s “zero tolerance” immigratio­n policy, and set out its most detailed plans yet on how it would reunite families.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said on Saturday it had a “well coordinate­d” process in place – in the face of criticism from lawyers for parents and children who have said they have seen little evidence of an organised system.

A total of 522 children had already been reunited with parents, the agency added in a factsheet published three days after Trump ended his policy of separating families on the US-Mexico border.

“The United States government knows the location of all children in its custody and is working to reunite them with their families,” the DHS said.

The new details came after more than two months of confusion how detained migrant parents, who are shuttled from facility to facility run by different government agencies, would ever reunite with their children, who are sent to shelters and foster homes scattered across the country.

The factsheet said the Trump administra­tion has a process for how parents would be reunited with their children “for the purposes of removal”, or deportatio­n.

Deportatio­n proceeding­s could take months to complete, and the factsheet did not say whether parents and children would be reunited in the intervenin­g time.

The Port Isabel detention centre in Texas will serve as “the primary family reunificat­ion and removal centre” for adults in ICE custody, the statement said.

Many of the parents are planning to claim asylum, lawyers and advocates who have spoken with them said. The factsheet did not say how reunificat­ions would be handled in those cases.

The factsheet said children are given the chance to speak with a “vetted parent, guardian or relative” within 24 hours of arriving at a facility run by Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) – the agency that has custody of the children.

Sirine Shebaya, a senior staff attorney with Muslim Advocates, said she and two other lawyers met about 70 detained Central American migrants at Port Isabel on Friday and Saturday.

All but one had been separated from their children, she added in an interview before the factsheet was published.

Several of the migrants had been given a number to call to try to locate their children, but found no one picked up, she said. If they did manage to get someone on the line, they were often told they would get a call back – useless to them while in a detention centre. — Reuters

 ??  ?? No man’s land: Five-year-old Genesis of La Ceiba, Honduras, peering through fencing along Gateway Internatio­nal Bridge that connects Brownsvill­e, Texas, with Matamoros, Mexico, over the Rio Grande River as she seeks asylum in the United States with her family. — AP
No man’s land: Five-year-old Genesis of La Ceiba, Honduras, peering through fencing along Gateway Internatio­nal Bridge that connects Brownsvill­e, Texas, with Matamoros, Mexico, over the Rio Grande River as she seeks asylum in the United States with her family. — AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia