US won’t expel migrant children detained in Texas hotel
A Hampton Inn is shown Tuesday, July 21, 2020 in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Matt York)
Immigrant children being detained in a Texas hotel are getting a reprieve from being deported and will be given a chance to stay in the U.S. The Trump administration,
through an emergency declaration issued on Monday, has agreed not to
remove a group of immigrant children it detained citing the coronavirus and will instead allow them to seek to remain in the U.S.
This comes after the Associated Press first reported on
the U.S. government's secretive practice of detaining unaccompanied
children in hotels before rapidly deporting them during the virus
pandemic. The U.S. had detained children nearly 200 times over two
months in three Hampton Inn & Suites hotels in Arizona and two
Texas border cities, according to data obtained by the AP. The agreement only covers 17 people known to have been detained as of Thursday at the Hampton Inn in McAllen. The Trump administration has not said it will stop using hotels to detain children. The legal groups that sued Friday night plans to challenge the overall practice in court. “The
children in this hotel averted disaster only because we happened to
hear about them before they were deported, yet hundreds if not thousands
of other children are being sent back to harm in secret," said Lee
Gelernt, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union. "The
government must stop expelling children in secret without giving them
asylum hearings.”
The children will be transferred by immigration
authorities to shelters operated by the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services, where they will have access to lawyers and can pursue
asylum cases or other immigration relief to try to remain in the
country. A
spokeswoman for Hilton, which owns the Hampton Inn brand, said
franchisees owned all three Hampton Inns and the others in Phoenix and
El Paso, Texas, would also stop child detention in its hotels. Hilton
said in a statement that the company expected all of its franchisees “to
reject business that would use a hotel in this way.” The Associated Press contributed to this article.
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