Immigration Agency Issues Detention Guidelines for Undocumented
Pregnant, Breast-Feeding Women
[Nov. 20, 2007]
The Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Friday issued new guidelines
on the detention of undocumented women who are breast-feeding, allowing
them to be released until deportation unless they are a threat to
national security, the New York Times reports. According to the Times,
the guidelines are in response to a "recurring quandary" for immigration
officials as the number of U.S.-born children of undocumented immigrants
increases.
The guidelines, which apply mainly to larger raids, instruct immigration
agents to coordinate with local and federal health agencies to screen
immigrants who are arrested to determine if they are caring for young
children or other dependents. Agents also must consider recommendations
from social workers who interview detained immigrants about whether they
should be released to their families while awaiting deportation, the
Times reports.
Some women's health and Hispanic groups criticized a decision last month
by federal immigration officials in Conneaut, Ohio, to separate Saida
Umanzor, an undocumented Honduran woman, from the nine-month-old
daughter she was breast-feeding. Julie Myers, head of ICE, ordered
Umanzor released and placed under house arrest on Oct. 26, 11 days after
she was detained. Umanzor's attorney, David Leopold, has asked that
Umanzor's deportation to Honduras be delayed on humanitarian grounds.
"We are faced with these sorts of situations frequently, where a large
number of individuals come illegally or overstay and have children in
the U.S.," Kelly Nantel, a spokesperson for the ICE said, adding,
"Unfortunately, the parents are putting their children in these
difficult situations." According to a study conducted by the National
Council of La Raza, a Hispanic civil-rights group, about two-thirds of
children of undocumented immigrants detained in immigration raids in the
past two years were born in the U.S. The nonpartisan research group Pew
Hispanic Center also found that about 3.1 million U.S. children have at
least one parent who is an undocumented immigrant (Preston, New York
Times, 11/17).
--
Sylvia Ann Ellison, M.A.
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**********************
"Formula feeding is the longest lasting uncontrolled experiment
lacking informed consent in the history of medicine."
1997 - Frank Oski, MD, retired editor, Journal of Pediatrics
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