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Trump order affects program for Central American children

- By Kate Linthicum Los Angeles Times

MEXICO CITY — President Donald Trump’s executive order on immigratio­n has halted a government program that allows Central American children to seek refugee status in the United States.

More than 11,000 people have applied for the program since 2014, when former President Barack Obama launched it in an attempt to dissuade Central Americans fleeing violence from making risky journeys to the U.S. border.

The program, which is available only to children who have a parent and in some cases an adult relative who is residing in the U.S. legally, screens applicants in their home countries. Since the effort was launched, more than 2,000 people have been resettled in the U.S., either as refugees or through a process known as humanitari­an parole, according to the State Department.

Trump’s executive order, which he signed Friday, called for the immediate suspension of all refugee admissions to the U.S. for 120 days. Although the change affects greater numbers of migrants fleeing war-torn regions of Africa, Asia and the Middle East, advocates say the order could have dangerous consequenc­es for children and their families in countries such as El Salvador and Honduras.

“This program was an important recognitio­n of the very real violence in these countries,” said Maureen Meyer, who advocates for migrant rights with the nonprofit Washington Office on Latin America. “Clearly the suspension of this program puts these children at more risk. A lot of people that are in danger could be killed.”

Trump characteri­zed his immigratio­n order, which also banned travel to the U.S. from seven predominan­tly Muslim countries, as a measure that would “make America safe again” by protecting the U.S. from foreign threats.

But advocates say the children who have applied for the Central America refugee program pose no danger to the U.S. and would be allowed in the country only after careful screening by the Department of Homeland Security. “The child has to go through a very extensive security vetting,” said Wendy Young, president of Kids in Need of Defense, a nonprofit organizati­on that advocates for immigrant children. “Refugees are the most vetted immigrants in the country.”

The program came into being in 2014, a year that saw record numbers of Central Americans asking for asylum at the U.S. border. Many of them traveled without guardians, often in the company of human trafficker­s. Many of the children said they were fleeing violence and forced gang recruitmen­t in El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala.

Obama enacted several measures to slow the migration. He asked Congress to earmark money to help improve economic and security conditions in Central America, and he enlisted Mexico to dramatical­ly step up deportatio­ns along its southern border.

The Central American Minors Program allowed young people to apply for refugee status from their home country. Those who faced the biggest threats were allowed to go to Costa Rica, a safer country, as they waited to find out whether their applicatio­n would be approved.

In 2016, the Obama administra­tion expanded the program slightly to allow adult family members of the children to apply for refugee status as well.

A spokesman for the State Department, which administer­s the program, did not say how many people were affected by the executive order or whether any Central Americans have been granted exemptions to the order and allowed to enter the U.S.

Jaime Rivas Castillo, a professor at Don Bosco University in El Salvador, said the suspension of the refugee program means some young migrants may look for other options to leave the country.

Some, he said, may seek asylum in nearby countries such as Mexico or Panama. Others, he said, may still risk the 2,000-mile journey to the U.S. border and try to enter illegally rather than seek asylum.

 ?? JOHN MOORE/GETTY ?? Advocates say children who have applied for the Central America refugee program pose no danger to the U.S.
JOHN MOORE/GETTY Advocates say children who have applied for the Central America refugee program pose no danger to the U.S.

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