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A child looks through the window of a bus carrying migrants near a detention facility in McAllen, Texas, on June 23. Photo: @aliarsalem via Reuters

Salvadoran teenager taken at US border tells of crowded ‘icebox’ cages and sparse meals

Girls were crammed into a room divided by wire fencing into three cages, with each holding 20 girls – some as young as three years old – said an affidavit filed in federal court

A 15-year-old girl who was forcibly separated from her mother after fleeing to the US from El Salvador described to a Washington State investigator how she was crammed into a windowless room with 60 other girls and deprived of proper sleep or food for three days.

The room was divided by wire fencing into three cages, with each one holding 20 separated girls – some as young as three years old, according to an affidavit filed on Monday in federal court in Seattle. The girls, who weren’t told when they would see their parents again, called it the “icebox.”

“The place was freezing because they kept the air conditioner on all the time, and each child was given a mat and an aluminium blanket,” the investigator for Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson wrote. “The girls placed their mats in the floor very close to one another, since there was not enough space.”

Activists march outside a federal detention centre holding migrant women on June 9 in SeaTac, Washington. Photo: Getty Images/AFP

The affidavit is part of a lawsuit by 17 states and the District of Columbia that seeks to block the child-separation policy on constitutional grounds. The states on Monday asked the court to order the government to begin quickly turning over evidence.

“The states have repeatedly demanded basic information about their well-being, but were answered with silence,” according to the filing.

More than 2,000 children were taken under the Trump administration’s zero-tolerance policy for prosecuting illegal border crossings and sent to states across the country.

US President Donald Trump issued an executive order to halt the practice started by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, but the directive may conflict with the zero-tolerance policy. The administration, which has not yet answered the suit, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The girl from El Salvador, identified as “G” in the filing, said agents kicked their mats daily at 4am to count them, and woke them again for meager meals. The guards refused to provide comfort to the youngest detainees and wouldn’t allow them to make phone calls, according to the filing.

Maricela Batres, a mother from El Salvador whose eight-year-old son was taken in May, described in another affidavit how she fled to the US after the MS-13 gang threatened to kill them if she didn’t pay $300 a month as “rent” for the store she ran – money she didn’t have.

A child is wrapped in material meant to represent the foil-like blankets provided at shelters for migrant children during a rally against the Trump administration's immigration policies near the federal courthouse in Brownsville, Texas, on June 28. Photo: AFP

Immigration agents detained Batres and her son at the border and put them in what she called a “kennel”, where they slept on the ground with aluminium blankets. That’s when she and others were informed their children would be taken away, she said.

“One said, ‘It is the price to pay for crossing the border,”’ she said.

New York Attorney General Barbara Underwood described in a filing how a distraught boy from South America was rushed to a hospital after trying to jump out of a second-story window in the group home where he was being held. At least 300 children were moved to New York, she said.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Teen taken at border tells of 60 girls kept in cold cages
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