U.S. authorities claim parents are guilty of migrant childrens’ deaths

Edited by Pavel Jacomino
2018-12-28 15:07:59

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U.S. authorities believe that the immigrant parents are to blame for the death of children.   Photo: Reuters

Washington, December 28 (RHC)-- U.S. authorities, rather than improving their immigration policies, have sought to shift the blame for the deaths of migrant children to the parents. 

Beginning this week, all the detained migrant children under the custody of the United States Border Patrol, will go through more rigorous medical check-ups.  This measure came after two Guatemalan children died while under U.S. custody a few days apart.
  
Secretary of Homeland Security, Kirstjen Nielsen said in a statement: “This tragedy, the death of a child in government custody is deeply concerning and heartbreaking.  In the last 24 hours, I have a directed a series of additional actions to care for those who enter our custody.”  She said that the Department of Homeland Security has been investigating the cases.

She also has “personally engaged with the Centers for Disease Control to request that their experts investigate the uptick in sick children crossing our borders.”

Felipe Gomez-Alonzo, an eight-year-old Guatemalan migrant boy died early on Christmas Day after being detained by the United States border agents.  His death followed the death in early December of seven-year-old Jakelin Caal, also from Guatemala.  She died of dehydration after being detained along with her father by U.S. border agents in a remote part of New Mexico.

Rather than recognizing the way U.S. border authorities treat immigrants who have the right under international law to seek asylum, Nielson shifted the burden onto the immigrant parents who “bring their children on a dangerous and illegal journey,” adding that these parents do not face consequences for their actions.

The comments come as Felipe's mother, back in Guatemala, faces the consequence of never seeing her son again.  “I’m sad and in despair over the death of my son,” the boy’s 32-year-old mother, Catarina Alonzo, told Reuters by phone from her home in the tiny village of Yalambojoch, speaking through a translator because of her limited Spanish.



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