When the U.S. puts a border between migrant kids and their caretakers
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[July 11, 2019]
By Kristina Cooke
(Reuters) - On June 12, Gerardo, a
41-year-old indigenous bricklayer from Guatemala, appeared before a U.S.
immigration judge in El Paso, Texas. Since crossing the U.S.-Mexico
border illegally two months earlier with his 14-year-old son, he had
been separated from the boy and forced to wait in Mexico for his
hearing.
Now, he had only one question for the judge: “Can you help me get my son
back?”
After they crossed into the United States, a border patrol agent
declared the boy’s photocopied birth certificate to be fake, casting
doubt on their father-son relationship. Despite Gerardo’s protestations
in broken Spanish, officers took the boy, Walter, away.
Gerardo was sent to Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, to wait out his immigration
court proceedings, with no idea where Walter was taken and no
instructions on how to find him, according to Gerardo and his attorneys,
who recounted the court appearance and circumstances of his case to
Reuters. They asked that his surname be withheld because Gerardo fears
for his family’s safety in Guatemala.
In a phone call to a cousin in Arkansas, Gerardo said, he learned that
Walter was at a large migrant children’s shelter near Miami. Separated
from his dad, Walter later recalled, "I felt like the world was crashing
down on me."
As a new Trump administration policy rapidly expands, family separations
increasingly are complicated by a formidable barrier: an international
border.
Started in January, the policy known as “Migrant Protection Protocols” (MPP)
requires some migrants to wait in Mexico for their immigration cases to
be processed, while others – based largely on border authorities’
discretion – are allowed to wait in the United States. Under MPP, about
18,500 migrants have been returned to Mexico, Mexican officials say.
For a graphic on the program, see: https://tmsnrt.rs/2LBeTKa
When children are sent north of the border and caregivers south,
communication and legal coordination suffer, kids’ emotional health can
deteriorate and simply finding one another again can take weeks,
according to about two dozen interviews with migrant families, their
attorneys and advocates, case workers and researchers, as well as
courtroom observations.
Although a court last year halted the widespread “zero tolerance”
separations of migrant parents and children at the border, U.S.
officials still separate certain family members there.
They separate children from parents if they believe documents to be
fraudulent, the parent has a criminal record, they can’t prove
parentage, or the child appears to be at risk. Officials also routinely
separate children from non-parent relatives with whom they traveled,
including aunts, siblings and grandparents - an approach also followed
during the Obama administration that is meant to stem child trafficking.
This year, under MPP, border officials in some locations have been given
the option to send such adults to Mexico rather than detain or release
them in the United States pending their court hearings. The separated
children are sent to U.S.-based children's shelters.
A U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) official said that parents
are not being separated from children due to the MPP program, and did
not respond when asked whether they track children separated from other
family members they had traveled with. The department's Customs and
Border Protection agency declined to comment on Gerardo’s case, citing
privacy concerns.
In general, the Trump administration has said that it is cracking down
on fraud at the border.
“We believe (smuggling organizations) have been coaching individuals by
saying if you come to the border with a child and you purport to be a
family unit, you will not get detained and you will be released into the
interior,” said Gregory Nevano, assistant director at the Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency's Homeland Security Investigations.
“We are trying to save and rescue children,” Nevano said.
ICE officials said they interviewed 2,475 "family units" (purported
parents and children) on the southwest border who “presented indicia of
fraud” between mid-April and July 5. Of those, 352 were found to be
falsely claiming parent-child relationships.
Attorneys and children's caseworkers say that when the caretaking adults
are sent to Mexico, it’s more difficult to contact them because they
often don’t have a fixed address. It's also harder for the adults and
children to connect: The 1-800 number available online to locate
children in U.S. shelters doesn’t work from Mexico.
Meanwhile, younger children may not know the details of their asylum
case or even the location of family members who might help or sponsor
them in the United States.
And in cases like Gerardo’s, the geographic boundary can make it harder
to identify and rectify a separation apparently made in error.
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Gerardo, a 42 year old indigenous father from Guatemala, is reunited
with his son Walter after the two were separated amid immigration
issues in Little Rock, Arkansas, U.S. July 5, 2019. REUTERS/Ricardo
Arduengo
PLEADING WITH JUDGES
On Monday in El Paso, a Nicaraguan woman told an immigration judge
she had been separated from her 5-year old daughter in mid-May and
sent back to Mexico, according to her attorney, Taylor Levy.
The woman explained that she had become pregnant with the girl after
a rape when she was 13, and so authorities listed the grandparents
as parents on the child’s birth records. She has asked to take a DNA
test, Levy said.
On the same day in San Diego immigration court, Reuters observed a
Guatemalan man tell a judge he had been separated from his 15-year
old son on May 3 and sent over the border. “I came here because of
the love I feel for him,” he said. “I’m very stressed because of
this separation.” It was not clear why they were separated.
Advocates say the United States does not appear to keep records on
family separations under MPP. Cases usually come to light only when
migrants come to court, often weeks after the separations occur.
Most migrants sent back to Mexico have not yet had hearings.
“As far as I’m aware, the government does not have any systems in
place for tracking the parents and children they separate under MPP,”
said Judy Rabinovitz, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU), which is challenging the MPP program in federal court.
Leah Chavla, a policy advisor with the Women’s Refugee Commission in
Washington, D.C., said she knows of at least six cases of children
separated from parents who were returned to Mexico. “I am positive
we are scratching the tip of the iceberg,” Chavla said.
She and other advocates said that when the validity of a familial
relationship is uncertain, it makes more sense to let parents stay
in the United States while the matter is sorted out.
Referring to Gerardo’s case, “It’s just so shocking how easily they
separated him and sent him across the border,” Chavla said. “You’d
think they’d do a little due diligence before that.”
As the MPP program expanded, staff of Jewish Family Service of San
Diego started to notice more people calling in to their hotline
saying they had been separated from family members, so the nonprofit
formally added a question about this to consultations.
In the past four weeks, the nonprofit said, it has seen 10 cases
involving a separated family out of 40 consultations, including a
grandmother who was separated even though she reported having legal
guardianship of her grandchild and documents to prove it. Most were
separations from non-parent relatives and non-biological parents.
Two months ago, Karla, 24, from El Salvador, was separated from her
11-year-old sister and 14-year-old brother after they sought asylum
at the U.S. border in Tijuana. Since their mother was murdered two
years ago, she said, she has been their primary caregiver.
In May, authorities dropped her off in Tijuana, and her siblings
were transferred to children’s shelters in the United States. She
asked to be identified by her first name only because she fears for
her safety in Mexico.
“We are alone in this world, we don’t have parents,” she said. “I
pray to God that we can be together again.”
Gerardo might have waited much longer in Mexico but for a stroke of
good luck.
Lawyers Haiyun Damon-Feng and Erin Carter were in El Paso
immigration court on the day he asked about getting his son back.
With the help of the ACLU, they contacted a Department of Justice
official who immediately intervened. On June 15, Gerardo was
released into the United States, under the immigration system’s
version of parole.
Walter was released last week and reunited with his father in
Arkansas.
Authorities had apparently verified their father-son relationship,
his attorneys said, using the same documentation declared fake at
the border three months earlier.
(Additional reporting by Jose Gallego Espina, Reade Levinson and
Ricardo Arduengo; Editing by Julie Marquis and Mica Rosenberg)
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