Parents of 303 children separated at US-Mexico border under Trump have still not been found

A mother and her young child preparing to board a bus at the US-Mexico border (AP)
A mother and her young child preparing to board a bus at the US-Mexico border (AP)

US authorities are still searching for the parents of 303 children who were separated at the US-Mexico border under the Trump administration.

Former president Donald Trump made aggressive and nativist immigration policies a hallmark of his time in the White House. Part of that was a policy of “zero tolerance” family separation - which saw asylum almost halted at the border, and the deportation of adults.

After Joe Biden entered the White House, his administration established a reunification task force in an attempt to reunite families forcibly separated by US Customs and Border Patrol between 2017 and 2018.

The task force announced in June that an estimated 3,913 children were separated from their parents, most of whom had left the US on Trump-era deportation flights.

US officials said in February between 600 - 700 children were still without parents, and since the task force begun working on reunification, has reunited 50 families. Many more were reunited through court.

CNN reported on Friday that the number had been reduced to 303 children, according to a Justice Department court filing this week.

The search continues for 218 parents not believed to be in the US. Some 73 parents or caregivers are thought to be in the US but have not been traced.

NBC News reported that there is no information whatsoever for parents of 12 children.

In August , the reunification task force said it had identified “nearly all” children who were separated at the border. Some 337 children were still without parents then.

It means that parents of 34 children have been found in the past month.

The American Civil Liberties Union has criticised the Biden administration for being slow to reunite them.

Lee Gelernt, the lead ACLU attorney on family separation, said in a statement that the 303 figure “vastly understates the problem”, and that many families were still not together.

“We have not even located 303 families but hundreds of more families who we have located still remain separated,” Mr Gelerent told The Independent. “Our hope is that through our negotiations with the Biden administration we can quickly begin reuniting the families we have contacted.”

It comes as Mr Biden faces scrutiny for the handling of an influx of mainly Haitian migrants at the border in Del Rio, Texas, where as many as 16,000 arrived in recent days.

Many have been deported and others have been transferred to processing facilities after a week of chaos at a temporary migrant camp that was set up on the banks of the Rio Grande, which separates the US and Mexico.

The Independent has reached out to the Justice Department for comment.

Additional reporting by The Associated Press

Read More

‘I promise you, those people will pay’: Biden slams border agents who whipped migrants

Trump sends supporters bizarre photoshopped photo of Bush and Cheney

Trump’s Arizona election audit only furthers Biden’s lead: ‘You can’t make it up’

Migrant camp shrinks on US border as more Haitians removed

AOC ‘cries’ after Democrats thwart Squad attempt to defund Israel’s Iron Dome