Who are these Central American Children?
Although the media talk about “Central American children,” almost all of
the detainees are, in fact, coming from only three of the six countries
of Central America: Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras. There are
almost none from Belize, Nicaragua, or Costa Rica. Anybody who
remembers the 1980s can probably guess why. The enormous quantities of
military “aid” that the United States poured into Guatemala, El
Salvador, and Honduras helped create an environment of violently
enforced inequality whose bitter fruits are still being reaped.
In fact, the so-called “crisis” of these last months is anything but
new, while the “debate” over where to temporarily detain the children is
beside the point. The number of Central American youths crossing the
U.S.-Mexican border has been rising steadily since 2000. Figures for
minors apprehended at the border have gone up from a few thousand a year
as the twenty-first century began, to 6,000-8,000 annually through
2011, 13,625 in 2012, and 24,668 in 2013. A study released in February 2014 predicted that as many as 60,000 children were likely to be apprehended this year.
Why the Children Are Coming?
First, U.S. policies
directly led to today’s crises in Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras.
Since Washington orchestrated the overthrow of the reformist,
democratically elected government of Jacobo Arbenz in Guatemala in 1954,
it has consistently cultivated repressive military regimes, savagely
repressed peasant and popular movements for social change, and imposed
economic policies including so-called free trade ones that favor foreign
investors and have proven devastating to the rural and urban poor.
Refugees from U.S.-sponsored dirty wars in Guatemala and El Salvador
-- mostly peasants whose communities had been subjected to
scorched-earth policies and the depredations of right-wing death squads
-- began to pour into the United States in the 1980s.
The refugee flood
from Honduras didn’t begin until the United States supported a military
coup against that country’s elected leftist president in 2009. The
youths crossing the border today are often the children and
grandchildren of those initial refugees, and are fleeing the endemic
violence and economic destruction left behind by the wars and the
devastation that resulted from them.
In other words, the policies that
led to the present “crisis” were promoted over the decades with similar
degrees of enthusiasm by Republicans and Democrats.
Second, an enormous demand for undocumented labor had already drawn
the parents of many of these children to the United States where they
clean houses and yards, wash dishes, and grow and process food. Their
underpaid labor helps sustain the U.S. economy. For generations, this
country’s immigration policy has focused on using Mexicans and Central
Americans as “workers” without granting them legal and human rights.
But workers are people and people have children. In other words, the
present crisis stems in part from the way our economy depends on
separating parents from their children in order to exploit their cheap
labor.
Finally, the communities and school systems that the federal
government expects to receive the border-crossing youth need more
federal support. Many of the locales receiving immigrants are indeed in
crisis. If, thanks to federal legislation and federal agencies, these
children are being released in large numbers to communities in which
schools are already underfunded, then the federal government should
guarantee the services that it requires communities to provide them.
Instead of spending
billions of dollars annually underwriting detention, deportation, and
the further militarization of the borderlands, it should direct those
funds to fulfilling human needs.
All parties should be criticized for
their policies in Central America (including President Obama’s free
trade agenda), their economic and immigration policies (that criminalize
workers), and the ways they are pitting immigrant youth against poor
Americans in a struggle for scarce resources.
taken from here
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