US govt responsible for finding parents of separated children: judge

AFP  |  Los Angeles 

The who ordered the reunification of families separated at the border has said it was the government's responsibility to locate parents deported without their children.

"Many of these parents were removed from the country without their child; all of this is the result of the government's separation and then inability and failure to track and reunite," US told a telephonic status conference from her office yesterday, according to US

"And the reality is that for every parent who is not located, there will be a permanent orphaned child, and that is 100 percent the responsibility of the administration." Sabraw ordered that the government put someone in charge of the "significant undertaking" to find the adults. So far, only 13 parents have been located.

"The is refusing to let the government off the hook for the mess it made," said of the (ACLU), which sued the government over the separations which resulted from the "zero tolerance" immigration policy.

The government, meanwhile, said in a court-ordered joint status report filed Thursday that the ACLU should use its "considerable resources and their network of law firms, NGOs, volunteers and others" to find deported parents and orchestrate reunification.

The rights group said it had made clear that it would help however it could, but that "the Government must bear the ultimate burden of finding the parents." "Not only was it the government's unconstitutional separation practice that led to this crisis, but the Government has far more resources than any group of NGOs," it said in the report.

Gelernt also accused of holding back information that could help locate the deported parents.

"Every day the government has sat on this information has been another day of suffering for these families," he said.

Sabraw had ordered on June 26 that all children under five years of age be reunited with their guardians by July 10, and all other children by July 26.

The government said it had met that deadline, but children remained in custody because ties had not been confirmed, or the parent had a criminal record, a or could not be found.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, August 04 2018. 10:40 IST