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The border fence gate between US and Mexico is opened for a few hours to allow separated families to embrace as part of Universal Children’s Day on 19 November 2016.
The border fence gate between US and Mexico is opened for a few hours to allow separated families to embrace as part of Universal Children’s Day on 19 November 2016. Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters
The border fence gate between US and Mexico is opened for a few hours to allow separated families to embrace as part of Universal Children’s Day on 19 November 2016. Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters

US considers separating women and children who cross illegally into US

This article is more than 7 years old

New policy would allow the government to keep parents and children in custody separately, to deter mothers from migrating to the US with their children

Women and children crossing together illegally into the United States could be separated by US authorities under a proposal being considered by the Department of Homeland Security, according to three government officials.

Part of the reason for the proposal is to deter mothers from migrating to the United States with their children, said the officials, who have been briefed on the proposal.

The policy shift would allow the government to keep parents in custody while they contest deportation or wait for asylum hearings. Children would be put into protective custody with the Department of Health and Human Services, in the “least restrictive setting” until they can be taken into the care of a US relative or state-sponsored guardian.

Currently, families contesting deportation or applying for asylum are generally released from detention quickly and allowed to remain in the United States until their cases are resolved. A federal appeals court ruling bars prolonged child detention.

Donald Trump has called for ending so-called “catch and release”, in which people who cross illegally are freed to live in the United States while awaiting legal proceedings.

Two of the officials were briefed on the proposal at a 2 February town hall for asylum officers by US Citizenship and Immigration Services asylum chief John Lafferty.

A third DHS official said the department was actively considering separating women from their children but has not made a decision.

DHS, HHS and the White House did not respond to requests for comment.

About 54,000 children and their guardians were apprehended between 1 October 2016, and 31 January 2017, more than double the number caught over the same time period a year earlier.

Republicans in Congress have argued women are willing to risk the dangerous journey with their children because they are assured they will be quickly released from detention and given court dates set years into the future.

Immigrant rights advocates have argued that Central America’s violent and impoverished conditions force mothers to immigrate to the United States and that they should be given asylum status.

The policy would allow DHS to detain parents while complying with a ninth US circuit court of appeals order from July 2016 that immigrant children should be released from detention as quickly as possible. That order said their parents were not required to be freed.

To comply with that order, the Obama administration implemented a policy of holding women and children at family detention centers for no more than 21 days before releasing them.

Implementing the new policy proposal “could create lifelong psychological trauma”, said Marielena Hincapie, executive director at the National Immigration Law Center. “Especially for children that have just completed a perilous journey from Central America.”

Hincapie said the US government was likely to face legal challenges based on immigration and family law if they decide to implement the policy. The Department of Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly last week ordered immigration agents to deport or criminally prosecute parents who facilitate the illegal smuggling of their children.

Many parents who arrive on the US-Mexico border with their children have paid smugglers to guide them across the dangerous terrain.

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