Unaccompanied migrant youth in U.S. detention centers rises  50%
Gang violence  in Central America has led to a big jump in the number of 
children who cross the  Mexican border alone in search of asylum in the U.S.
By Cindy Chang, Los Angeles Times 
October 16, 2012 
L_atimes.com/news/local/la-me-immigration-children-20121016,0,6904349.story_
 
(http://latimes.com/news/local/la-me-immigration-children-20121016,0,6904349.story)
  
 

Gang violence in Central America has led to a startling increase  in the 
number of children who make the dangerous journey across the Mexican  border 
alone in search of asylum in the United States, according to a report by  the 
Women's Refugee Commission, a nonprofit that advocates for displaced women  
and children. 
The number of unaccompanied migrant children in U.S. detention  centers 
grew nearly 50%, from 6,854 in fiscal 2011 to more than 10,000 in the  
nine-month period ended June 30, according to federal statistics cited in the  
report, titled "Forced From Home: The Lost Boys and Girls of Central America."  
With three months left in the latest reporting period, the fiscal 2012 
figures  are expected to rise further. 
Most of the growth came from three countries: El Salvador, with  68% more 
unaccompanied minors; Guatemala, with 72% more; and Honduras, with the  
number more than doubling, from 1,201 to 2,477. The number of Mexican children  
crossing the border alone fell in the same period. 
In interviews conducted with 151 children in federal holding  facilities, 
nearly 80% told researchers that violence was the main reason they  set out 
for the U.S. by themselves, traveling with paid guides on buses or  chancing 
the desert trek as stowaways on top of trains. 
One 16-year-old from Honduras told the report's authors that he  was 
threatened with physical violence after refusing to be recruited by a gang.  He 
could no longer attend school safely, so he came to the U.S. to continue his  
studies. 
The children travel on their own because their parents are  already in the 
U.S., because they are fleeing domestic violence or because the  family ca
nnot undertake the journey together, said advocates who work with  them. 
"What they said is, 'If I stayed, I definitely would die.' They  knew it 
would be a dangerous journey, but at least there's a chance," said  Michelle 
Brane¿, director of the Women's Refugee Commission's detention and  asylum 
program. 
U.S. Customs and Border Protection, along with the Department of  Health 
and Human Services' Office of Refugee Resettlement, were criticized in  the 
report for operating substandard detention facilities. Officials from the  two 
agencies were unavailable for comment. 
The Federation for American Immigration Reform, an  anti-immigration group, 
blamed the influx of Central American children on a new  federal program 
granting a two-year reprieve from deportation to some young  immigrants. 
"The Obama administration has made it very clear — if you get  your kids to 
the U.S. and keep them here for a while, they can stay," said Ira  Mehlman, 
a spokesman for the group. "That's the unmistakable message he's sent  
around the world. Not surprisingly, you have parents who say, 'Let's do  
that.'" 
Other countries are responsible for ensuring the safety of their  own 
citizens, Mehlman added. Asylum should be reserved for a select few cases,  or 
"the potential is you could have billions of people qualifying for political  
asylum in the U.S." 
Most of the young border-crossers will end up going back to the  countries 
they fled, immigrant advocates said. 
The children have no right to a court-appointed attorney in  asylum 
proceedings. Even with legal counsel, cases based on the threat of gang  
violence 
have proved difficult to win. Most successful cases have involved  children 
who have lost their parents because of abandonment, abuse or neglect,  said 
Judy London, directing attorney of the Immigrants' Rights Project at the  pro 
bono law firm Public Counsel. 
"It's all dependent on getting an experienced lawyer," London  said. "The 
vast majority aren't going to get the legal representation they need,  or 
they're going to get it too late." 
Emergency "surge" shelters to house young migrants arriving  without 
parents have been built, said the report. 
The report likened conditions in the surge facilities, opened  after 
October 2011 by the Office of Refugee Resettlement, to those in an  emergency 
hurricane shelter. The children received basic medical care, four  hours of 
school and some recreation but not the full slate of education and case  
management offered in regular detention centers. 
Because the new centers sprung up so quickly, they often  neglected to 
provide the "Know Your Rights" legal orientations that are standard  in 
detention facilities, leaving the children clueless about their options, the  
report 
said. 
The massive increase also resulted in detainees spending longer  periods in 
temporary holding cells, nicknamed "freezers" operated by Customs and  
Border Protection. The children described the cells' conditions to the report's 
 
authors as having inadequate food and water and lights on 24 hours a day, 
and  lacking blankets in frigid temperatures, showers and enough room to lie  
down. 
[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) 


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