Migrant Children Relocated as US Border Agency Commissioner Resigns

US House Democrats have said that they plan to pass a $4.5 billion emergency aid package to address the rapidly deteriorating conditions at the border.


Around 250 children have been moved from a squalid detention centre that was lacking in food, water, and medicine. Customs and Border Agency (CBP) commissioner John Sanders has resigned his post amidst the backlash.

The acting commissioner of the US CBP, John Sanders will be stepping down on July 5, amidst widespread criticism of the agency’s treatment of refugee children at the US-Mexico border, the New York Times reported on Tuesday.

Two female detainees sleep in a holding cell at the US CBP Nogales Placement Center in Nogales, Arizona. Photo: Reuters/Ross D. Franklin

John Sanders has only led the agency since April, having been appointed after President Donald Trump’s department of homeland security reshuffle.

At the same time, the CBP announced that 250 migrant children would be relocated from a squalid Texas border patrol station, where they had been held for weeks without adequate food and water, and necessities like toothpaste and toothbrushes.

An attorney who visited the facility said that children had to take care of babies themselves in the absence of childcare professionals. They also reported that sick children were not receiving adequate care.

Also Read: Trump Admin Argues in Court That Detained Children Don’t Need Soap, Toothbrushes

Migrants held in ‘concentration camps’

The camps where migrants are being held under the Trump administration’s hardline immigration policy and campaign against the right to claim asylum have been called “concentration camps.” They have drawn intense criticism because of their derelict conditions and lack of access to services.

US House Democrats have said that they plan to pass a $4.5 billion emergency aid package to address the rapidly deteriorating conditions at the border. The Bill is expected to pass the Democrat-controlled chamber, despite objections from some progressive Democrats that too much money is being allocated to law enforcement over shelters.

As lawmakers rush to add language that would enshrine better health and nutrition conditions at border facilities, President Trump has threatened to veto the Bill, despite requesting the aid package himself. He says the provisions added by Democrats would make the border “less safe.”

This article was originally published on DW.

How Refugees in Ghana and Liberia Started a School for Their Own

Before the free schools came up, a large number of refugee children were not getting an education because their parents could not afford the fees.

Before the free schools came up, a large number of refugee children were not getting an education because their parents could not afford the fees.

Students in CAMES, Liberia. Credit: Karrus Hayes

Students in CAMES, Liberia. Credit: Karrus Hayes

A boy lights his cigar, “Everyday this woman cries. Women of Liberia hold fast onto your prayers. Your tears, I mean your tears are important. They could make a cup of water for us to drink. Have you forgotten how cruel we were during the civil war?”

A woman sitting in the corner shouts, “Shut up, you filthy rebel. Shut up!”

“Who are you calling rebels? I said who are you calling rebels? We are child soldiers under the maximum authority of our superiors.”

“Oh, you mean you are the man who killed a pregnant woman and took the little baby from her stomach. And it’s you who killed our families, raped our young girls and women, destroyed our future. Yes, it is you. We will pray God gives you severe treatment for the massacre of innocent unborn children you have caused.”

“Stop sister, stop.”

“Women of Liberia, we are all women in tears, who were abused, sexually, mentally, and our babies became child soldiers. Let us put away the past.”

“Hmm, I think you are right. Indeed, they are our children. Let us forgive them and bring peace and reconciliation, mothers, please put away your tears.”

“We agree; we are no more child soldiers.”

“Yes, we are the future of the nation…”

In the Buduburam refugee camp in Ghana, children are performing a role play in their school. They reflect on how the civil war in Liberia has ruined the lives of common people. “These children were not born when the civil war took place in Liberia, but it is important for them to know what happened in the civil war. Unless you know the history, you cannot make your future bright. We can learn many lessons from history,” said Sam Daniel, their drama teacher.

After being displaced by the civil war, thousands of people are now trying to survive terrible poverty in Ghana’s Buduburam refugee camp. “Getting food is a daily struggle. I remember going to bed without food for many days. If you are lucky you will get some gari, pepper, salt and chicken soup. It becomes a huge meal for that day,” said Marilyn Clinton, a woman who lives in the Buduburam camp.

“Since there are no toilets in the camp, we go to the golf course. It is not really a bush area, some parts are even barren. You cannot go there alone. It is very risky. At any time the local Ghanaian people may come and harm you. They feel very happy to harass us,” said Clinton. Sexual abuse and exploitation of refugee girls and women by local communities have been officially reported. For instance in 2012, an unregistered orphanage at the camp was closed down and its managers allegedly arrested for prostituting girls. “During a visit to the refugee camp in April 2012 we discovered that orphaned refugee girls were being sold for sex and their orphanage had become a hub for sex-trade activity,” said Danny Kresynak, who is associated with Journalists for Human Rights, a Toronto based media development agency.

But now there is something in the Buduburam camp that its residents are proud of. A school is providing free education to children and employment opportunities to teachers. “A school in the refugee camp is no less than a miracle for us. We are hopeful for our children now,” said Habbi Kamara, a refugee in the camp.

The journey of a refugee

Karrus Hayes is one of over 40,000 refugees, mostly Liberian, who live in this camp in Ghana. “I came here as a result of Liberia civil war. I don’t have any idea what happened to my family. I came to Ghana in 1996 and left my family behind in Liberia,” said Hayes.

Hayes is one of the founding members of Vision Awake Africa for Development (VAAFD), an NGO dedicated to work for the refugee communities of Ghana and Liberia. “Actually my vision was never to start a school, but I walked around the camp and I saw that many kids were out of school because their parents don’t have money to pay school fees. This troubled me, but I didn’t know what to do or where to start.”

As a first step, Hayes took the space offered by a local church called Ghana Christian Centre and started a free primary school in the Buduburam refugee camp. Volunteers from the camp became teachers. The school was named Carolyn A. Miller Elementary School (CAMES). “For these refugee children who have become orphans due to the civil war in Liberia, education had become a distant dream. We are grateful to Hayes for initiating such a noble step,” said K. Hopeson, the church’s pastor.

Carolyn A. Miller is one of many personalities who has influenced and inspired Hayes’s work with refugee children. An American from Iowa, Miller came to Liberia in 1966 to teach nursing at the Cuttington University College.

“On sponsorship by the Lutheran Church of USA, I stayed in Liberia for over 24 years and came across many people. Hayes Hayes is one among them. I knew him from Liberia and when he became a refugee at the Buduburam camp in Ghana, he quickly began to see the tremendous need for the Liberian children who were now refugees in Ghana to continue with school. His special interest was the children who were orphaned by the war and had absolutely no chance to attend school without money. So he started the school in the local church,” Miller told The Wire.

Students at CAMES, Ghana. Credit: Karrus Hayes

Students at CAMES, Ghana. Credit: Karrus Hayes

Hayes soon realised that the space allotted by the church was too small, with the number of children coming to school increasing every day. This was the only school in the camp that provided free education. “It was time for the school to grow, to reach out to the other children in the camp. We were crippled without financial resources. The government is not bothered with these children. No other private agencies or NGOs were working at that time in the camp whom we could request for assistance,” said Hayes.

Soon, Hayes and his volunteer teachers saw a ray of hope.

One day, Cori Shepherd Stern, an American screenwriter and humanitarian worker, visited the Buduburam refugee camp along with two volunteer friends. They were working towards sensitising the residents on the prevention of HIV/AIDS and also providing counselling to victims of the disease. Soon Stern came to know about Hayes and his school, and she was invited to visit CAMES. She was deeply impressed by the project and assured Hayes that she would help him raise funds for a new school building.

After returning to the US, Stern got her friends involved in raising funds and launched a ‘Ten Days Mission’. Her group successfully raised $5,000 to build a brand new school, and they even came to Ghana to build it. “Since you cannot help everyone, you have to pay special attention to those whom you come upon by accidents of time or circumstances. It was my pleasure to launch the Ten Days Mission, not only with all our Ten Days volunteers but with all the Liberian volunteers in the refugee camp who came together to build the school,” said Stern.

Building classroom realities

With the generous support of Stern and her friends, Hayes’s dream of establishing a school building in the Buduburam refugee camp turned into reality in 2005. Both young and old refugees joined hands with the volunteering team.

“We were all overwhelmed at that moment. We thought we are not constructing mere buildings of cement, iron rods and bricks; rather we are building a platform for educating these children in one of the poorest and most war-affected nations of the world,” said Hayes.

Today, the school has nine classrooms, 15 teachers and 212 students. Free materials like pens, pencils, notebooks and textbooks are provided to the students. In addition, a wholesome cooked meal made from rice, gari, beans, greens, cassava and plantain is also served to the children for lunch, ensuring at least one nourishing meal per day.

Above all, CAMES lays emphasis on developing a favourable classroom environment, where students spontaneously articulate their ideas and aspirations. For Hayes and his team, the task has just begun.

“Students can’t begin to learn if they don’t feel safe in their own classroom. It is very important for any newcomer in my classroom to feel safe and secure. They need to have that support system because the classroom community could be that child’s only sense of security for the day as their home life might be very difficult,” explained Kwou Scout, the principal of CAMES. “The classroom structure is their safety net because everything else around these children could be in turmoil due to possible transitions issues.”

But creating an enabling environment in the classroom was very challenging. Due to constant transitions in the camp, a student sometimes feels lost, alone and become uncooperative with teachers and classmates, and confused by the expectations of the school. “Facing problems such as poverty, depression and loneliness, students often long for meaningful connections with their peers and teachers in school. They also struggle in initiating and sustaining these relationships,” said Lydia L. Thomas, who works as a teacher in CAMES.

In order to address the issue, teachers were sensitised and sustained efforts were taken to increase their capacity to understand the psychology of refugee children. “We have seen that the key factor in creating successful classroom communities are those teachers who are able to identify the specialised needs of refugee children and who are culturally responsive to the needs of refugee children in the classroom,” said Kwou.

In addition to teaching core academic subjects, teachers also talk about how to live in society, how to be supportive of each other and how to prepare themselves to be productive and cooperative members of the communities in which they live. “When somebody new comes in to our school, they are paired up with possibly somebody who speaks their language or at least from their area. In this way, the new student finds a enabling environment to articulate his or her feelings and experience,” said Thomas.

As Hayes puts it, “By creating classrooms and schools where students and parents feel a part of a community, teachers help students feel valued in their school experiences and, as a consequence, feel more motivated to do well in academics”.

Students with new book. Credit: Karrus Hayes

Students with new book. Credit: Karrus Hayes

“Unlike conventional education, in CAMES we follow child-centric education methods which engage students with the subject. We encourage students to discuss, brainstorm and debate. Role plays are also conducted by the students on various topics like how to prevent the Ebola virus, why is education important, why should we protect forests,” said Kwou.

Emphasis is given to appreciating students’ cultural knowledge, he added; they are motivated to express and share their experience which ultimately boosts their self-confidence. “It is also an important way for teachers to learn more about their student’s language needs. Teaching through objects is an excellent means to enhance students’ sensory literacy, allowing them to develop the ability to compile evidence through sight, touch, hearing, smell and even taste, and to analyse.”

The school also promotes extra-curricular activities like sports, drawing, singing and drama, Hayes added.

Jacob Roberts, who works as a physical education teacher, said, “We do regular physical exercise. But we only have one football, no jerseys, nothing of that kind. Salary is also a problem for us. Since there is lack of funds, sometimes we are not paid for 2-3 months. We are just bearing it. Because we cannot give up, we have to continue. I can’t keep back what I have learned. I am giving it to these children, so tomorrow they will help build Liberia.”

“Despite the challenges our teachers are doing a great job, they are dedicated and passionate to rebuild the future of Liberia. And the results are praiseworthy,” said Hayes. Within the last decade, over 5,000 children who would otherwise have remained outside of the school system have graduated with their basic school certificates, and the chance to build a future.

Take for instance Mimi Mulbah, a former CAMES student now pursuing her degree in nursing at Cuttington University. “I never thought that I would be able to study at the university level but with the help of CAMES my dream has come true,” Mulbah told The Wire. Josephine, another former CAMES student, is now studying at the African Methodist University.

Returning to Liberia

Meanwhile, as the situation in Liberia started to improve, refugees who fled to Ghana during the civil war were allowed by the Liberian government to return to their home country. “It was a very tough moment for me. Over the years, I have established a strong bonding with the refugee communities in Buduburam But, it was also time for me to return to my country. But we will not close CAMES in Ghana. Not at all,” said Hayes.

There are a lot of refugees in the Buduburam who lost their families during the civil war and decided not to return. For them, a school like CAMES is the only option to educate their children in Ghana. The school has now been running successfully for several years.

After returning to Liberia in 2009, Hayes noticed the same problem in Monrovia, the capital city. Refugees who had returned Liberia hardly had the resources to send their children to school. Therefore, he set up another CAMES – targeting the growing stream of returnees from Ghana. The school has around 400 students, ranging from kindergarten to the 12th standard. About half of these students are former refugees who have come back from Ghana.

“However, raising funds for the school in Liberia has proven to be a much more difficult task than doing the same in Ghana. In Ghana, the school gets regular visitors from the US and other Western countries, who provide volunteer support and donations. This is not the case in Liberia, which does not yet attract the type of tourist that Ghana does,” said Hayes.

“Initially, we had persistently requested to the Ministry of Education of both Ghana and Liberia to provide financial assistance to CAMES. But their response was not very encouraging,” Hayes continued. In 2015, the Liberian Ministry of Education donated some primary textbooks to the school. And in 2016, the Gahnaian Ministry of Education donated a couple of computers.

“We have realised that mere individual donations are not adequate to raise funds for the school, so we started a crowdfunding campaign through the Global Giving platform. And to some extend we have been successful in raising funds,” said Hayes. The principal is looking for creative ways to make the school self-sufficient – selling crafts or agricultural products are some of the possibilities being explored.

According to a UNHCR report, Refugees are five times more likely to be out of school than the global average. Some 3.5 million refugee boys and girls have no access to education, while only 1 percent attend university education. Only 50 percent of refugee children have access to primary education, compared with a global average of more than 90 percent”.

Liberia’s President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, Africa’s first elected female head of the state, described the country’s education system as “a mess”.  The Ministry of Education estimates that 60% of primary school-age children aren’t enrolled in classes and as many as 5,000 teachers on the government payroll are “ghosts” – meaning that although they don’t show up for work, somebody is pocketing their pay-checks, at a cost of 15% of the country’s annual education budget.

In this backdrop, schools like CAMES are a ray of hope. It is high time for the Liberian government to revisit education policies and make them more inclusive as well as pragmatic, with a special focus on refugee children. As Hayes says, “When you look at these children, you see abilities, you see aspirations. The future of the nation depends on them. Without the chance to study, an entire generation will be at risk”.

Abhijit Mohanty is a Delhi-based development professional. He has worked with the indigenous communities in India and Cameroon, especially on the issues of land, forests and water.  

A Grisly Tale of Refugee Children Falling Easy Prey to Ruthless Smugglers

At least 300,000 unaccompanied and separated children were recorded in some 80 countries in the combined years of 2015 and 2016, up from 66,000 in 2010 and 2011, according to a UN report.

At least 300,000 unaccompanied and separated children were recorded in some 80 countries in the combined years of 2015 and 2016, up from 66,000 in 2010 and 2011, according to a UN report.

In the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, three children look out of the window of a train, which was boarded by refugees primarily from Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq, at a reception centre for refugees and migrants, in Gevgelija. Credit: UNICEF/Ashley Gilbertson VII

Rome: Don’t read this story if you are a parent or have children relatives. It is the bloodcurdling story of over 300,000 unaccompanied refugee and migrant children who are just a small part of millions of children that are innocent, easy prey for smugglers and human traffickers worldwide.

Among a raft of alarming statistics, a new UN report has just found that children account for around 28% of trafficking victims globally. And that Sub-Saharan Africa and Central America and the Caribbean have the highest share of children among detected trafficking victims, at the rates of 64-62%, respectively.

The new report, issued by the UN Children Fund (UNICEF), also informs that the number of children travelling alone has increased five-fold since 2010, warning that many young refugees and migrants are taking highly dangerous routes, often at the mercy of traffickers, to reach their destinations.

At least 300,000 unaccompanied and separated children were recorded in some 80 countries in the combined years of 2015 and 2016, up from 66,000 in 2010 and 2011, according to the report, ‘A Child is a Child: Protecting children on the move from violence, abuse and exploitation’, which was released on May 18 and presents a global snapshot of refugee and migrant children, the motivations behind their journeys and the risks they face along the way.

“One child moving alone is one too many, and yet today, there are a staggering number of children doing just that – we as adults are failing to protect them,” commented UNICEF deputy executive director Justin Forsyth. “Ruthless smugglers and traffickers are exploiting their vulnerability for personal gain, helping children to cross borders, only to sell them into slavery and forced prostitution. It is unconscionable that we are not adequately defending children from these predators.”

A migrant gestures from behind the bars of a cell at a detention centre in Libya, Tuesday 31 January. Credit: UNICEF/Romenzi

First and foremost, children need protection, the UN agency reminded, while highlighting the importance of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, through which State Parties commit to respect and ensure the rights of “each child within their jurisdiction, without discrimination of any kind.

One of World’s Deadliest Routes for Children

Few weeks earlier, a senior UNICEF official called the routes from sub-Saharan Africa into Libya and across the sea to Europe one of the “world’s deadliest and most dangerous for children and women,” as the UN agency informed that nearly half of the women and children interviewed after making the voyage were raped.

On this, its report A Deadly Journey for Children: The Central Mediterranean Migrant Route, warned that “refugee and migrant children and women are routinely suffering sexual violence, exploitation, abuse and detention along the Central Mediterranean migration route from North Africa to Italy,”

At the time of the report, which was issued end of February, 256,000 migrants were recorded in Libya, including about 54,000 included women and children. “This is a low count with actual numbers at least three times higher.”

The UN agency believes that at least 181,000 people –including more than 25,800 unaccompanied children –used smugglers in 2016 to try to reach Italy. “At the most dangerous portion– from southern Libya to Sicily – one in every 40 people is killed.”

Raped, Exploited, Left in Debt

Here, Afshan Khan, UNICEF Regional Director and Special Coordinator for the Refugee and Migrant Crisis in Europe, said that the Central Mediterranean from North Africa to Europe is among the world’s deadliest and most dangerous migrant routes for children and women. “The route is mostly controlled by smugglers, traffickers and other people seeking to prey upon desperate children and women who are simply seeking refuge or a better life.”

An abandoned farmhouse with a mattress used by prostitutes in Palermo. “I missed ever being a child,” says [NAME CHANGED] Mary, who was helped by a lawyer after she was trafficked to Italy, aged 17. Credit: © UNICEF/UN062791/Gilbertson VII Photo

“Nearly half the women and children interviewed had experienced sexual abuse during migration – often multiple times and in multiple locations,” with “widespread and systematic” sexual violence at crossings and checkpoints.

“In addition, about three-quarters of all the children interviewed said that they had “experienced violence, harassment or aggression at the hands of adults” including beatings, verbal and emotional abuse.”

In Western Libya, women were often held in detention centres were they reported “harsh conditions, such as poor nutrition and sanitation, significant overcrowding and a lack of access to health care and legal assistance,” the UN Children Fund informed.

What the most powerful should – and can do

Included in the report is a six-point agenda calling for “safe and legal pathways and safeguards to protect migrating children.” UNICEF urged the EU to adopt this agenda ahead of the Summit of the G7 (the group of the seven most powerful countries) in Taormina, Italy, on 26-27 May.

The six-point agenda stresses the need to protect child refugees and migrants, particularly unaccompanied children, from exploitation and violence; to end the detention of children seeking refugee status or migrating by introducing a range of practical alternatives, and to keep families together as the best way to protect children and give children legal status.

It recommends, as well, to keep all refugee and migrant children learning and give them access to health and other quality services; to press for action on the underlying causes of large scale movements of refugees and migrants; and to promote measures to combat xenophobia, discrimination and marginalisation in countries of transit and destination.

Such commitments would obviously be easy to take and implement by the G7 governments. The point is: will the political leaders of the world’s richest countries consider, seriously, this inhuman tragedy?

Are they aware that the number of children left alone has been soaring? UNICEF – which they created to assist millions of European refugee children, victims of their Wold War II – has just reported that 92% of children who arrived to Italy by sea in 2016 were unaccompanied, up from 75% in 2015.

Do these mandatories know that 75% of children who arrived in Italy – the very same country hosting their summit – have reported experiences such as being held against their will or being forced to work without pay?

Let alone the case of hundreds of children who are abducted to sell their organs, to be recruited by terrorist organisations as child soldiers, or are exploited in harsh “modern” slavery work.

Will these political leaders mostly talk big finance and big business – including the May 20 US-Saudi Arabia weapons deal amounting to 110 billion dollars? Who knows…they might also have some spare time to read US president Donald Trump’s latest tweets.

(IPS) 

UN Refugee Summit Falls Short For Children

Children should not be criminalised for fleeing the horrors of war, yet the US has an ugly record of detaining unaccompanied refugee children.

Children should not be criminalised for fleeing the horrors of war, but the US has an ugly record of detaining unaccompanied refugee children.

Just over half of the world's refugees are children. Credit: James Jeffrey/ IPS.

Just over half of the world’s refugees are children. Credit: James Jeffrey/ IPS.

United Nations: As Olympic swimmer Yusra Mardini opened the floor for US President Barack Obama’s leaders’ summit on refugees, she embodied a hope unavailable to most child refugees.

On Monday, the US was one of the main countries to obstruct a UN Declaration that no child should ever be detained. Though welcome, the US’s commitment the following day to resettle 110,000 refugees in 2017 was overshadowed by its ugly record on detaining unaccompanied minors.

Just over half of the world’s 65.3 million refugees are children, of which the vast majority, some 25 million children, are out of school, threatening to leave almost an entire generation behind.

Obama’s summit was the second of two high level meetings on migration and refugees held during the UN General Assembly on Monday and Tuesday this week.

After UN member states failed to come up with a collective agreement to resettle one in ten refugees on Monday, Obama invited countries to make commitments on an individual, “pay to play” basis: invitation rested on “new and significant commitments”, whether as resettlement opportunities or financial contributions.

The summit saw 52 countries and organisations pledge a total of $4.5 billion in humanitarian aid, double the number of people to be resettled, whether as refugees as or by other legal routes, and improve access to education for a million refugee children and access to work for a million refugees.

“This crisis is a test of our common humanity – whether we give in to suspicion and fear and build walls, or whether we see ourselves in another. Those girls being trafficked and tortured, they could be our daughters,” Obama said in his eighth and final address to the UN General Assembly as president, alluding to Donald Trump’s fear-mongering campaign.

Yet critics have called attention to the US’s record of detaining unaccompanied minors and young women from Central America, saying it is a thorn in the country’s side – in what they call “its own backyard”.

“[Obama] should be commended for trying to build responsibility-sharing globally,” Kevin Appleby, director of New York’s Center for Migration Studies, told IPS. “But again he needs to be consistent with all refugee populations in need… The administration is just not putting the effort into it in terms of protection for this particular migration flow,” he said, referring to Central American refugees.

Unlawful and arbitrary detention

“It is completely unequivocal for us that child detention solves nothing and all it does is punish some of the most vulnerable who have had absolutely no hand in creating the situations that they are trying to escape,” Hannah Stoddart, director of advocacy and communications at War Child, told IPS.

United States President Barack Obama addresses the High-level Leaders’ Summit on Refugees which he hosted on the margins of the UN General Assembly general debate. Credit: UN Photo/Rick Bajornas.

US President Barack Obama addresses the high-level leaders’ summit on refugees which he hosted on the margins of the UN General Assembly general debate. Credit: UN Photo/Rick Bajornas.

“We are extremely disappointed that the language on child detention was watered down in the final document.”

“We see that children in conflict situations and children fleeing conflict are often at much higher risk of detention and our message is very clear that no child should be criminalised because they have fled the horrors of war and no child should be criminalised because of their parents and because of the status of their parents,” Stoddart said.

The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, of which US is one of the few countries in the world not to be a signatory, states that “no child shall be deprived of his or her liberty unlawfully or arbitrarily”. It also states that the detention of a child should be “for the shortest appropriate period of time”.

Australia’s policy of detaining refugee children at offshore detention centres in Papua New Guinea and Nauru has come under criticism because the children detained there are held on an indefinite basis.

Promises to prioritise refugee education at Obama’s summit were welcomed, since only 50% of child refugees are in primary school and only 22% are in secondary school. Protracted crises present problems of lost generations – swathes of people denied education and corresponding prospects due to ongoing displacement.

War Child lamented that, of the UK’s pledge, 100 million pounds will be spent on deterrence. They say this money would “be far better invested in the education and protection of children who have fled conflict and persecution”.

The UK government is already underway building a wall at Calais to block migrants. On Sunday a 14-year-old boy from Afghanistan was killed after being hit by a lorry as he tried to enter the UK – despite the fact he had the legal right to be there, like the majority of the 900 unaccompanied children currently stuck in Calais.

Speaking at an event hosted by War Child, Salim Salamah, director of the Palestinian League for Human Rights, said that the most important aspect of ensuring children go to school is that their parents are employed. Salamah, who is Palestinian, was born and raised in a Syrian refugee camp – before being forced to seek refuge in Sweden, one year before the end of his degree in law at the University of Damascus.

Small efforts are underway: some Syrians living in Zaatari camp in Jordan, for instance, have recently been provided with work permits – but with 670,000 Syrians living in Jordan alone, more is needed, as 9 out of 10 live under the Jordanian poverty line of $87/month.

Central American refugees

From October 2013 to August 2015, 102,000 unaccompanied children reached US from Mexico and Central American countries such as El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala. Fleeing gang-related violence extreme poverty and states unable or unwilling to protect them, these numbers are dramatically higher than the steady flows of migrants arriving from the region since the 1980s.

“A child’s protection should not be based on a parent’s immigration status. This is a child protection issue; it’s not an immigration issue; it’s not an enforcement issue,” said Megan McKenna, communications director at Kids in Need of Defence (KIND) which provides free legal services to children. Under the Central America Minors’ Programme, only children whose parents have legal status in the US are allowed to stay.

Rights groups argue that though six out of 10 Central Americans arriving have valid asylum claims, they are routinely treated as economic migrants and not as refugees.

Still, “there’s an intimate connection between instability, threats of violence and your ability to earn a livelihood,” said Noah Bullock, executive director of Foundation Cristosal in El Salvador.

Speaking at the UN on Tuesday, Obama claimed that “America has been a rare superpower in human history insofar as it has been willing to think beyond narrow self-interest.”

“In the context of Central American refugees, it’s brazenly clear that the policy is driven by national interest,” Appleby responded. “Everything I’ve heard him saying – about helping people and saving people in the Mediterranean, in terms of family reunification – our administration is guilty of”.

US is “spending millions of dollars on detention, family detention with private prison companies,” says Appleby, “and in paying the Mexican authorities to interdict and stem the flow of migrants,” who are there further marginalised and frequently returned to the situations they originally fled.

Far more attention needs to be paid to the US’s own complicity in the problems that ravage the region, from its foreign policy, including the 2009 coup of Honduras’s democratically elected President Manuel Zelaya, to the war on drugs.

Indicating that this should be seen as a legacy issue, Appleby said, “I’m sorry – but he’s [Obama] deported more people than any other president. He’s separated more families than any other president. So I would have to take exception to his words on that, because the actions don’t match the rhetoric.”

Detaining Migrant Children is a Gross Violation of Their Rights

States need to think of alternatives instead of locking up children on the move.

States need to think of alternatives instead of locking up children on the move.

On 18 February 2016, refugee and migrant families cross the borderline near the Gevgelija transit center on the border with Greece. In February, women and children made up nearly 60 per cent of sea arrivals to Europe, compared to 27 per cent in September 2015. As part of a joint endeavour to step up protection for the growing numbers of children and others with specific needs arriving in Europe, UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, and UNICEF are setting up special support centres for children and families along the most frequently used migration routes in Europe. Twenty Child and Family Support Hubs, to be known as “Blue Dots,” will provide a safe space for children and their families, vital services, play, protection and counselling in a single location. The hubs aim to support vulnerable families on the move, especially the many unaccompanied or separated children at risk of sickness, trauma, violence, exploitation and trafficking. While the situation continues to evolve, at present the first hubs are now operational or about to open in Greece, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Serbia, Croatia and Slovenia. All 20 will be operational within the next three months. The “Blue Dot” hubs services include restoring family links (services provided by the Red Cross and Red Crescent network), family reunification, child friendly space and dedicated mother and baby/toddler spaces, private rooms for counselling, psychosocial first aid, legal counselling, safe spaces for women and children to sleep, outreach social workers, and an information desk with Wi-Fi connectivity. The “Blue Dot” hubs come at a time when women and children account for two thirds of those crossing to Europe: In February, women and children made up nearly 60 per cent of sea arrivals compared to 27 per cent in September 2015. They will also aim to identify and protect children and adolescents travelling alone, and reunite them with family wherever possible, depending on their best. Credit: Unicef/The Conversation

Credit: Unicef/The Conversation

Children represent around a quarter of all migrants worldwide. While in June 2015, one in ten migrants reaching the Macedonian border from Greece was a child, in October 2015 it was one in three.

Without regular status and the protection that comes with it, children on the move are particularly vulnerable to exploitation, violence and abuse. The unknown social and cultural environment, as well as their age and level of development, often make it impossible for them to be aware of and assert their rights.

Rather than opening regular, safe and cheap channels for migration, states continue to erect walls, use barbed wire fences and systemically detain migrants, including children. For too many children, their experience is all too often linked to their status as immigrants, rather than their age. While there is little reliable data on how many migrant children are being detained, there is evidence that it is happening around the world.

Detention is rarely justified

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights as well as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights proclaim the right to the liberty and security of persons. This applies to everyone subject to the jurisdiction of a state and to all forms of detention, including for immigration purposes.

States use a wide range of reasons to justify detention of migrants: health and security screening, identity checks, preventing absconding and facilitating removal. But freedom should be the default position for these migrants, as it is for citizens and legal residents. Detention should only occur when a person represents a demonstrated individualised risk to public security or may abscond from mandatory proceedings. In most cases, such a risk cannot be individually demonstrated and detention cannot be justified as necessary, reasonable or proportionate.

Children are also entitled to the protection afforded to them by the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), which is the most ratified UN human rights treaty, lacking only one ratification in the whole of UN membership – the US. The CRC proclaims that “no child shall be deprived of his liberty arbitrarily” and asserts that all institutions should ensure that “the best interests of the child shall be a primary consideration”.

A quarter of today’s migrants are children. Credit: Unicef/The Conversation

Detention for administrative purposes can never ever be in the best interests of a child. It harms their physical and psychological well-being and has adverse effects on their development. It might aggravate trauma experienced before arriving in the transit or destination country. The constant control and surveillance may be very disturbing for a child, increasing already high levels of mental distress. Children deprived of their liberty often have difficulties understanding why they are being “punished” despite having committed no crime.

Separation from community and from the outside world can make a child feel isolated and decrease their confidence. The often poor hygienic conditions and unbalanced diet will have negative consequences on physical well-being and development. Often children and adults are detained together, which puts children at further risk. Housing migrant children and adults in the same detention structure can lead to physical and sexual violence and abuse, while disrespectful staff may further exacerbate a child’s feelings of humiliation and so further impact their development.

How to protect lone children

Children can make migratory journeys on their own, sometimes having been separated from their parents or other adult relatives en route. These unaccompanied minors or separated children are vulnerable to becoming victims of human rights violations, such as sexual and economic exploitation and trafficking, and their situation requires special attention.

Unaccompanied children should never be detained purely on the basis of their migratory or residence status, or lack thereof, nor should they be criminalised solely for reasons of irregular entry or presence in the country. They should be treated as children first and placed in the alternative care system, either with a family or under institutional care. Under no circumstances should they be left on their own, as this leaves them vulnerable to violence.

States should systematically appoint an independent and competent guardian as soon as the unaccompanied or separated child is identified and maintain such guardianship arrangements until the child has either reached the age of majority or has permanently left the jurisdiction of the state. The guardian must not only take care of administrative processes related to the immigration status, but ensure that he or she advocates for the child’s rights and best interests.

The guardian should be independent of the immigration authorities and should have the authority and means to appoint a lawyer to represent the child in all proceedings affecting their rights. States should undertake every effort to quickly reunite children with other family members, if considered in their best interests, taking into account their own opinion and how they see their future.

Provide alternatives

The detention of children with their parents is often justified by states using Article 9 of the CRC, which affirms that children shall not be separated from their parents against their will. Yet, Article 2 of the CRC provides that “children [shall] not to be punished for the acts of their parents, legal guardians or family members”. Absurdly, I have personally observed families detained in the same detention centre, but separated in three groups (women, girls and infants, male teenagers, adult males), with only one daily hour of common family time.

A decision to detain migrants who are accompanied by their children should therefore only be taken in very exceptional circumstances: the vast majority of families with children should be offered alternatives to detention. Such non-custodial measures may include registration or reporting requirements, deposit of documents, a reasonable bond or a guarantor, and supervised release.

When applying alternatives to detention, states need to make sure they respect children’s rights, including to education, to the enjoyment of the highest possible standard of health, to an adequate standard of living, to rest, leisure and play, to practice their own religion and to use their own language.

Detaining children because they or their parents are migrants can never be in their best interests. Irregular migration is not a crime and very few of those children present any danger to society. Children should be treated as children first and non-custodial alternatives to detention should be offered to all such unaccompanied children and to families with children.

A longer version of this article was co-published with Unicef as part of the Children on the Move research watch project.

The Conversation

François Crépeau is full professor director at the Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism, Hans & Tamar Oppenheimer Chair in Public International Law, McGill University

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.