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U.S. Reunites Some Migrants With Parents

  US officials have reunited 57 children under age five with their parents who crossed the border without authorization, but nearly four dozen remain separated … Continue reading U.S. Reunites Some Migrants With Parents


(FILES) In this file photo taken on June 15, 2018 Mothers and children wait to be assisted by volunteers in a humanitarian center in the border town of McAllen, Texas. US officials have ordered DNA tests on “under 3,000” detained children who remain separated from their migrant parents, in an effort to reunite families at the center of a border crisis, a top US official said July 5, 2018. The Department of Health and Human Services is “doing DNA testing to confirm parentage quickly and accurately,” HHS Secretary Alex Azar told reporters on a conference call, stressing the department was seeking to meet a court-imposed deadline of next Tuesday to reunite some 100 detained children under age five. Leila Macor / AFP
Children wrap themselves up with Mylar blankets to ‘symbolically represent the thousands of children separated from families on the border, sleeping on floors and held in cages’, on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. Alex Wong/Getty Images/AFP

 

US officials have reunited 57 children under age five with their parents who crossed the border without authorization, but nearly four dozen remain separated beyond a court-ordered deadline, the White House said Thursday.

The Donald Trump administration has faced domestic and international outcry over its announced “zero tolerance” policy of arresting all those who cross the border illegally and separating parents from the children they brought with them.

The US president has been under intense pressure to reunite nearly 3,000 children with their families.

A federal judge ordered the reunification of all children under five with their families by July 10.

But of the 103 children in that category, just 57 have been reunited, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and Health and Human Services Department (HHS) said.

The remaining 46 children were deemed “ineligible” due to multiple concerns over their guardians, including 11 adults with a serious criminal history like charges or convictions for murder, child cruelty, smuggling or domestic violence.

Seven adults were determined not to be the child’s parent and 12 parents had already been deported.

One child under age five has been detained for more than a year because the parent’s location is not known, DHS said.

“The American people gave this administration a mandate to end the lawlessness at the border, and President Trump is keeping his promise to do exactly that,” HHS Secretary Alex Azar, DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen and Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a joint statement announcing the reunifications.

“Our agencies’ careful vetting procedures helped prevent the reunification of children with an alleged murderer, an adult convicted of child cruelty, and adults determined not to be the parent of the child,” they added.

AFP