Bangkok Post

463 parents may have been deported without children

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WASHINGTON: More than 450 immigrant parents who were separated from their children when they entered the United States illegally are no longer in the country though their children remain behind, according to a joint court filing on Monday by the federal government and the American Civil Liberties Union.

The absence of the 463 parents, which US government lawyers said was “under review”, could impede government efforts to reunite separated families by tomorrow, the deadline ordered by a federal judge. The filing did not say why the 463 parents had left the country, but government officials acknowledg­e that some parents had been deported without their children.

As of Monday, 879 parents had been reunited with their children, according to the filing.

About 2,500 children were separated from their parents after the Trump administra­tion announced a “zero tolerance” policy in April aimed at discouragi­ng illegal immigratio­n. The policy was ended in June amid an internatio­nal outcry about the government’s treatment of immigrant children.

US District Judge Dana Sabraw in San Diego ordered last month that the government had to reunite the children with their parents in a case brought by the ACLU.

On Monday, the government also said 917 parents were either not eligible to be reunited or not yet known to be eligible to be reunited with their child. That number includes parents no longer in the country as well as those deemed unsuitable because of criminal conviction­s or for other reasons.

Immigratio­n advocates have expressed alarm about parents deported without their children, saying it can create problems with the children’s immigratio­n cases.

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