As more evidence emerges that the Central American children arriving at the U.S border are fleeing horrific violence, lawmakers and advocates are starting to call it as they see it.
“They are refugees,” Rep. Rush Holt, a New Jersey Democrat, said on Capitol Hill Wednesday. “That’s how we can start, by using the appropriate language.”
The seemingly small change in how the U.S. refers to the children — as refugees rather than “illegal” immigrants — could trigger a dramatic shift in how the government processes the thousands of young kids who have already crossed into the U.S. Instead of focusing on ways to speed up deportations of children fleeing from danger, human rights groups are hoping attention will turn toward granting children their due process rights in seeking asylum claims.
Advocates have insisted for weeks that the surge of unaccompanied minors at the border is a humanitarian and refugee emergency, not one rooted in the Obama administration’s immigration policies. The United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHRC) said it is witnessing extreme violence on the ground in Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador where the overwhelming majority of new arrivals have come from. Asylum claims from those three countries have skyrocketed 712% in the last five years, UNHCR said. And migrants aren’t just fleeing to the United States. Nicaragua has seen a 238% increase in asylum applications in the last year, suggesting that families are fleeing to anywhere they can go.
“We must remember that these children are refugees, and deportation can mean death for many of them,” Cristina Jimenez, managing director of United We Dream, said in a statement. The group is hosting a vigil for unaccompanied children along the border in Texas Thursday to focus attention on the violence the kids are fleeing from.
The stories from migrants along the border are harrowing. Some accuse Guatemalan gangsters or drug lords of murdering men with impunity. Others describe sidestepping dead bodies on the streets of Honduras as routine. Most all say they had no choice but to leave.
After interviewing more than 400 children who successfully fled their home countries, the UNHCR found that almost 60% of children had legitimate claims to seek asylum in the United States. Most were escaping recruiting attempts by violent gangs who forced participation or threatened the entire families of children who refused.
The White House has repeatedly said that the vast majority of the children currently swept up at the border do not meet the standards for asylum admissions. On Wednesday, President Obama said it was likely that most would be sent back to their countries.
Children who do meet asylum criteria, White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said this week, will be sent through the proper legal channels to avoid being returned to harm’s way. But advocates warn that U.S. judges’ interpretations of asylum law don’t always play out in the children’s favor.
To qualify for asylum, a child must prove they have been persecuted in the past, or risk further threats in the future over their race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion. It is up to a judge to use their discretion in each case to decide whether gang violence qualifies as persecution. The problem is then exacerbated when it’s a child who appears before an immigration court without full legal representation.
“Gang-related violence has been viewed through a lens that characterizes it as common crime,” explained Nancy Kelly, managing director at Harvard Law’s Immigration and Refugee Clinic, setting a high bar for those who have been persecuted by gangs. “And for a child who’s trying to go forward without an attorney, it’s next to impossible.”
The UNHCR released a set of guidelines for asylum applications, including standards for victims of organized violence, trafficking and even torture. And though the United States has adopted the international definition of asylum, advocates say judges can adopt more conservative interpretations of an applicant’s experiences when considering the asylum standard.








