How US Immigration Policies Endangered Central American and Cuban Children
July 30, 2014
How Can Americans Turn Their Backs on These Kids?
How US Immigration Policies Endangered Central American and Cuban Children
by W.T. WHITNEY, Jr.
Leaving parents behind, 57,000 children crossed into the United States without papers between October 2013 and June, 2014. They were fleeing deadly violence in Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador. Numbers have been up for three years. No arrangements were in place along the U.S. southwest border for quick and certain refuge and children now languish in detention centers. Having faced one humanitarian crisis, they were confronting another.
The Texas governor mobilized the National Guard, anti-immigrant protesters targeted the children, and on July 14 the first plane carrying exclusively mothers and children returned 22 children to San Pedro Sula in Honduras.
Restrictive immigration policies applying to Latin Americans dovetail with other U.S. measures harmful to poor people in the region, and elsewhere, among them free trade agreements, U.S. aid to the regions repressive military and police forces, a green light for multi-national corporations, and alliances with wealthy classes of many countries.
Children are the losers. U.S. assumptions as regards immigration that strategic goals come first relegate childrens needs to an afterthought. That this is so even for would-be Cuban migrants, whose emigration experience has been radically different, bolsters that argument.
Cubans about to migrate can count on U.S. acceptance. No one else in the world enjoys such welcome. The Cuban Adjustment Act (CAA) of 1966 enables all Cubans to gain permanent residence a year after their arrival, and expect citizenship. The legislations purpose was propaganda. The U.S. open door encouraged many Cubans to leave as economic migrants, but the official line was that they were refugees from so-called communist tyranny.
More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/07/30/how-us-immigration-policies-endangered-central-american-and-cuban-children/