'World should know,' migrant tells U.S. Congress of toddler's death
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[July 11, 2019]
By Bryan Pietsch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Guatemalan asylum
seeker left some members of a U.S. House panel visibly shaken on
Wednesday with the story of her daughter's death, saying the toddler had
contracted a deadly lung infection during a 20-day detention near the
U.S. border with Mexico.
Yazmin Juarez told a House of Representatives subcommittee that it was
"like they tore out a piece of my heart" when just weeks after they were
released her daughter Mariee died at 19 months old.
She said she left a hospital with nothing but a piece of paper with two
handprints in pink paint that staff had made for her, and described
through a translator how she missed her daughter's hugs.
Juarez said it was hard to relive the experience, but wanted to shed
light on the lack of medical care. "The world should know," she said.
"It can’t be so hard for a country like the United States to protect
kids who are locked up."
Juarez testified at the House Committee on Oversight and Reform that was
examining treatment of refugees in U.S. detention.
Apprehensions along the border have spiked to the highest in at least a
decade, driven by families from Central America who say they are seeking
asylum and fleeing violence in their home countries.
Images of filthy detention facilities jammed with refugees has sparked
widespread criticism. On Monday U.N. human rights chief Michelle
Bachelet said she was "appalled" that migrant children were forced to
sleep on floors.
President Donald Trump's tough stance on immigration has been one of his
signature policies. "If Illegal Immigrants are unhappy with the
conditions in the quickly built or refitted detentions centers, just
tell them not to come," Trump wrote on Twitter last week.
Juarez told members of Congress, several of whom appeared shaken by her
testimony, that her daughter was healthy when the pair were initially
detained. They were held with 30 others, including sick children whom
Juarez said could have infected her daughter.
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Yazmin Juarez, mother of 19-month-old Mariee, who died after
detention by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE),
testifies before a House Oversight Subcommittee on Civil Rights and
Human Services hearing titled, "Kids in Cages: Inhumane Treatment at
the Border" in Washington, U.S. July 10, 2019. REUTERS/Erin Scott
Juarez said that she and her daughter fled violence in Guatemala for
a better life.
“Unfortunately, that did not happen,” Juarez said.
Several members of the subcommittee including New York Democrat
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez hugged Juarez after she spoke.
"No hay palabras, there are no words," said Chip Roy of Texas, the
ranking Republican on the subcommittee.
He blamed Democrats for the border crowding.
"The blood is on the hands of the Democrats who refuse to actually
address this," he said.
The hearing came as a senior U.S. Customs and Border Protection
official told reporters that border agents were detaining only about
200 unaccompanied children at locations in the Southwest as of
Wednesday, down from more than 2,500 in May. The reduction reflects
funding increases that have enabled a federal health agency to
expand its holding capacity.
(Reporting by Bryan Pietsch; Additional reporting by Tom Hals in
Wilmington, Delaware; Editing by Frank McGurty and Lisa Shumaker)
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