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UN Frowns As Trump Maintains Policy Of Children With Parents In Custody

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The United Nations ( Photo File)

The United Nations Wants Trump To Consider Better Ways of Detention, Complains That Innocent Children Are In Custody.

While the United Nations today acknowledged the United State’s withdrawal on separating migrant families at the US-Mexico border . It has expressed displeasure that children are in custody with their migrant parents.

According to UN rights office spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani,”Children should never be detained for reasons related to them or their parents’ migration status,”

“It is never in the best interest of the child for them to be detained,” she told newsmen in Geneva.

This comment comes two days after US President Donald Trump, ordered an end to his administration’s widely criticized policy of separating families at the border.

Nigeria News reports that Images and recordings of wailing children detained in cage-like enclosures has ignited global outrage, forcing the abrupt change of tactics.

Trump’s executive order would keep families together but in custody indefinitely while the parents are prosecuted for entering the country illegally.

The president’s order also suggests the government intends to hold families indefinitely by challenging a 1997 court ruling known as the Flores Settlement, which places a 20-day limit on how long children, alone or with their parents, can be detained.

Shamdasani slammed this solution, insisting that Washington “needs to explore non-custodial alternatives to detention, bearing in mind first and foremost the human rights of these migrants, in particular where families and children are involved.”

“Irregular migration should not be a criminal offence. These people should not be treated as criminals,” she said.

The UN, she said, is calling for the “US to just overhaul its migration policies, urging the country to find “community-based alternatives to detention for children and families.”

Similarly, The UN children’s agency UNICEF also vehemently opposes the policy, spokesman Christophe Boulierac told reporters.

“We oppose two things: We oppose separating children from their families for the purposes of migration control but we also oppose to detentions,” he said.

He lamented that the United States was among some 100 countries around the world that detain children for the purpose of migration control.

“We are working with governments to change that,” he said, insisting that there are “alternatives which are working,” including appointing community members who can guarantee that a child will show up in immigration court.



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