Major U.S. airlines refuse to carry children seized by immigration agents

Major U.S. airlines are telling the White House that they don't want to participate in any transportation of migrant children who have been separated from their parents at border crossings.
CBC News ·
American Airlines and United have both informed the government they want no part of the U.S. government's enforcement of immigration laws. (Kiichiro Sato/Associated Press)

Major U.S. airlines are telling the White House that they don't want to participate in any transportation of migrant children who have been separated from their parents at border crossings.

In a statement Wednesday, American Airlines said it doesn't know whether any migrant children have been on its flights, but it doesn't want to profit from the current immigration policy of separating families.

"The family separation process that has been widely publicized is not at all aligned with the values of American Airlines," the airline said in a statement. "We bring families together, not apart."

American and other airlines have contracts to provide travel services to the U.S. government. American says, however, that the government doesn't provide information about the passengers or their reason for travel.

United Airlines echoed that sentiment, saying in a statement that the airline is "concerned about reports that commercial airlines have been used to transport immigrant children separated from their parents by a newly implemented immigration enforcement policy."

The airline added that it has informed government officials "that they should not transport immigrant children on United aircraft."

"We want no part of it," United's statement said

In recent days, several flight attendants have gone on social media to report seeing groups of children on their flights whom they believed to be children separated from their migrant families.