US govt failing to meet court deadline on reunifications

Ordered by a judge to reunite all children under the age of five with their families by July 10, US authorities say they will not be able to comply with the deadline due to an assortment of reasons.

A child from Honduras is brought to the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in Grand Rapids, Mich., Tuesday, July 10, 2018. Two boys and a girl who had been in temporary foster care in Grand Rapids, have been reunited with their Honduran fathers after they were separated at the US-Mexico border about three months ago.
AP

A child from Honduras is brought to the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in Grand Rapids, Mich., Tuesday, July 10, 2018. Two boys and a girl who had been in temporary foster care in Grand Rapids, have been reunited with their Honduran fathers after they were separated at the US-Mexico border about three months ago.

US officials have said less than half of 102 young immigrant children in their custody would be reunited with their parents in time for a court-imposed deadline Tuesday, with the fate of dozens more still in limbo.

Ordered by a judge to reunite all children under the age of five with their families by July 10, officials said four had already rejoined their parents on Tuesday and another 34 reunifications would take place through the day.

But they said the rest would be delayed, some because the parents were still in legal custody, others because the parents were found to have serious criminal records, and still others because the parents had already been deported.

TRT World's Ben Tornquist has more.

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Children being reunited

"Reunifications are ongoing throughout the day," said Chris Meekins, a senior official of the Department of Health and Human Services.

"Our due diligence is protecting children. What we are doing now is insuring that those children are not being reunited with people who could do them harm," said Meekins.

San Diego Judge Dana Sabraw on Monday gave the government more time to reunite the 102 children, among more than 2,300 minors split from their families as a consequence of Donald Trump's "zero tolerance" policy that saw parents prosecuted for illegally crossing the border.

Older children have been ordered reunited with their families by July 26.

Despite the delays, the judge reportedly said he had seen "real progress" towards reuniting the youngest children with their relatives.

Meekins said reunifications for 20 were being delayed by "logistical reasons" -- including the fact that for 12, their parents had already been deported from the United States.

He said DNA tests had also shown that five adults were not a child's parent as they had claimed upon entering the United States.

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Problems await some children

Ten children will continue to await reunification while their parents remain in criminal custody facing charges of entering the country illegally.

Others faced a variety of problems, including one child who had been abused by the parent, and another whose parent had a contagious disease.

The US government came under fierce international criticism for forcibly separating thousands of migrant families, most of them from Central America and most seeking asylum due to violence in their home countries.

The backlash led Trump to suspend the separations – ordered as part of an effort by the Homeland Security and Justice Departments to deter migrants from illegally crossing the Mexican border.

Trump's 'cynical attempt'

Meanwhile, in Los Angeles federal judge has rejected the Trump administration's request to detain immigrant families together, calling it a "cynical" attempt to undo a longstanding court settlement.

US District Judge Dolly Gee said Monday that the federal government had failed to present new evidence to support revising a court order that limits the detention of children who crossed the border illegally.

The Department of Justice asked Gee to alter a 1997 settlement after the president reversed his zero-tolerance policy that caused uproar when children were taken from their parents in emotional scenes caught on camera.

The government wants to change the settlement so it can detain families together.

Gee says the effort attempts to foist responsibility on the court for the president's "ill-considered" action and Congress' failure to take action.

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