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Mass Deportations from US May Send Children to Their Deaths

Mass Deportations from US May Send Children to Their Deaths
folder_openUnited States access_time8 years ago
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Local Editor

Over the first weekend of 2016 the Obama administration arrested at least 121 migrants who fled misery and violence in places they can't call their homes. According to the reports, some of those marked for deportation are children as young as 4 years old.

Mass Deportations from US May Send Children to Their Deaths

While most Americans were preparing for Christmas celebrations and buying presents for their families, US authorities were planning raids on illegal migrants in Georgia, Texas and other states. The first arrests took place right after the holidays, the Department of Homeland Security [DHS] announced Monday. The DHS also constituted that the first wave of mass deportations of those who lost their asylum cases could impact as many as 15,000 people.

The advocacy organization #Not1More Deportation reported that during mass arrests in the Atlanta area Immigration and Customs Enforcement [ICE] agents stormed into the homes of undocumented immigrants not even showing warrants and removed mothers and children as young as 4 years old.

"They took away children so young they would've needed car seats in their vehicles for them," said executive director of the Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights Adelina Nicholls in a statement released Sunday.

The new year has just begun, and at least 11 families have already been taken to the so-called "ICE family residential centers" from where they will be sent back to predominantly Central American countries which they had fled out of fear for their security.

According to Times' reports, women at the centers said they fled "because gangs had murdered their husbands or siblings, tried to recruit their sons or threatened  their daughters."

An inquiry carried out by the Guardian in October provided evidence that there were cases when those deported were murdered soon after they landed in their motherland. Deportation, thus, may be equal to death sentence.

DHS Secretary Jeh Jonson said Monday that Americans shouldn't be surprised by the government's brutal measures as he has "said publicly for months that individuals who constitute enforcement priorities, including families and unaccompanied children, will be removed."

Nevertheless, human rights activists continue to say it's inhuman to deport little children to such dangerous places.

"The DHS is spending more resources hunting 9-year-olds than it does to respond to the blatant violations in its own agency," director of the national #Not1More Campaign Marisa Franco said. "These raids are part of a pattern of abuse and intimidation woven into the fabric of the immigration enforcement agency."

The arrests came a year and a half after Obama publicly claimed he wanted to try and make his immigration policy more humane, Franco sadly noted.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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