Don't blame Jakelin Caal's death on her father. US policies did this
The death of the seven-year-old Guatemalan girl in US border patrol custody demands a reckoning
Brianna Rennix and Nathan Robinson
Mon 17 Dec 2018 12.25 EST
There are still unknown facts about the death of Jakelin Caal, the seven-year-old Guatemalan girl who died in the custody of US border patrol. Jakelin became seriously ill while being bussed to a detention center located about 90 miles from the New Mexican desert where she and her father were picked up. US officials have blamed Jakelins father, insisting that Jakelin had not had food or water for days when she arrived and that Jakelins father signed a form asserting she was healthy when she arrived.
Jakelins father has insisted that this is false that his daughter had been eating and drinking, that they hadnt undertaken the kind of long desert crossing portrayed in the press, and that the form the US cites was in English, a language he does not speak.
We do know that Jakelin did not receive treatment for 90 minutes after she began showing symptoms. In the coming days, more information about Jakelins death may emerge that will allow us to determine what US officials knew, whether they reacted quickly or not, and whether the medical care she received was adequate.
But these questions are almost secondary, because US responsibility for the suffering of migrant children is already very clear. When asked about Jakelin, a White House spokesman replied: Does the administration take responsibility for a parent taking a child on a trek through Mexico to get to this country? No. This attempt to shift blame on to desperate parents ignores critical facts.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/dec/17/dont-blame-jakelin-caals-death-father-us-policies