The Biden administration has said the number of unaccompanied Afghan children in the agency’s custody has now grown to more than 100, CBS News reports. Under U.S. law, children are considered unaccompanied even if the adult they are traveling with is a sibling. While the report said that some children have since been reunited with a relative, a group continues to wait in U.S. custody until they can be placed with a sponsor.
"We are working to ensure that Unaccompanied Afghan Minors (UAM) who are referred to the Office of Refugee and Resettlement (ORR) for processing, unification, or placement are placed with licensed care providers that are able to provide culturally and linguistically appropriate services or unified directly with a vetted sponsor, such as a family member who arrived with the minor," the agency told CBS News.
The Biden administration said late last month that at least 34 children were in U.S. custody after fleeing Afghanistan without an adult relative. It was unclear if that meant they had traveled completely alone. These children have remained in U.S. custody, waiting to be placed with a relative here (similarly to asylum-seeking Central American children). CBS News reports that if children have “come truly alone,” they “could be placed in long-term foster care programs, according to the memo.”
Officials had said that they had expected that group of at least 34 children to grow as larger numbers of Afghan allies and families were being evacuated to the U.S. by the Biden administration as part of Operation Allies Rescue. ”Since August 17, approximately 48,000 Afghan evacuees deemed to be at-risk of being harmed in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan have been allowed to enter the U.S., according to DHS figures,” CBS News reports. Thousands others remain in third-country bases awaiting processing.
Kids in Need of Defense (KIND), which has also advocated for Central American children fleeing to the U.S. for safety, has issued guidance for protecting unaccompanied children fleeing Afghanistan.
”Afghan children and families arriving in the United States have experienced extreme trauma in their flight from harm. Humanitarian reception and response is imperative,” the guidance said. “This includes providing critical support services in the immediate term and throughout the resettlement or reunification process. To that end, we urge the government to provide all families, including children, with immediate access to legal representation and social services to ensure legal protection, provide assistance in processing trauma, and help children and families as they rebuild their lives outside of Afghanistan.”
“We still do not know how many Afghan children will seek international protection, but we do know that early reports suggest that children are arriving in many countries, including the United States, some having lost their families forever, others having been separated from their loved ones in the chaos of fleeing their homeland,” KIND president Wendy Young said. “What the United States and other nations do now will determine the trajectory of these children’s lives. The United States has a responsibility to get this right.”
"We are working to ensure that Unaccompanied Afghan Minors (UAM) who are referred to the Office of Refugee and Resettlement (ORR) for processing, unification, or placement are placed with licensed care providers that are able to provide culturally and linguistically appropriate services or unified directly with a vetted sponsor, such as a family member who arrived with the minor," the agency told CBS News.
The Biden administration said late last month that at least 34 children were in U.S. custody after fleeing Afghanistan without an adult relative. It was unclear if that meant they had traveled completely alone. These children have remained in U.S. custody, waiting to be placed with a relative here (similarly to asylum-seeking Central American children). CBS News reports that if children have “come truly alone,” they “could be placed in long-term foster care programs, according to the memo.”
Officials had said that they had expected that group of at least 34 children to grow as larger numbers of Afghan allies and families were being evacuated to the U.S. by the Biden administration as part of Operation Allies Rescue. ”Since August 17, approximately 48,000 Afghan evacuees deemed to be at-risk of being harmed in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan have been allowed to enter the U.S., according to DHS figures,” CBS News reports. Thousands others remain in third-country bases awaiting processing.
More than 100 unaccompanied Afghan children are now in U.S. custody. Most are being reunited with their families — but what happens to the ones who won't be? @camiloreports has the story https://t.co/mnAEMUYyRd pic.twitter.com/pjpelK8pi4
— CBS News (@CBSNews) September 8, 2021
Kids in Need of Defense (KIND), which has also advocated for Central American children fleeing to the U.S. for safety, has issued guidance for protecting unaccompanied children fleeing Afghanistan.
”Afghan children and families arriving in the United States have experienced extreme trauma in their flight from harm. Humanitarian reception and response is imperative,” the guidance said. “This includes providing critical support services in the immediate term and throughout the resettlement or reunification process. To that end, we urge the government to provide all families, including children, with immediate access to legal representation and social services to ensure legal protection, provide assistance in processing trauma, and help children and families as they rebuild their lives outside of Afghanistan.”
Here at KIND, our recommendations draw on our experience serving and protecting unaccompanied children globally. We urge @POTUS to implement these policies to protect unaccompanied Afghan children arriving in the US.https://t.co/J3uU3QIvGD
— KIND (@supportKIND) September 7, 2021
“We still do not know how many Afghan children will seek international protection, but we do know that early reports suggest that children are arriving in many countries, including the United States, some having lost their families forever, others having been separated from their loved ones in the chaos of fleeing their homeland,” KIND president Wendy Young said. “What the United States and other nations do now will determine the trajectory of these children’s lives. The United States has a responsibility to get this right.”