Members Only | October 19, 2021 | Reading Time: 3 minutes

How are we going to explain to Haitian kids what the US did to their parents? That democracy is a nice idea, applicable to some?

America’s insatiable paranoia over border security.

Image courtesy of the AFP.
Image courtesy of the AFP.

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The news that Biden’s administration is to provide legal support for unaccompanied migrant children in several American cities will doubtless be welcomed. The federal initiative is said to provide attorneys to represent children facing deportation proceedings after having entered the country on their own at the southern border.

But when examining United States border policy holistically, the move doesn’t go nearly far enough. It’s a drop in the ocean when considering the escalating humanitarian crisis — and it is a crisis — that exists as a result of US border policies, foreign policy and influence. 


The flames of that paranoia were stoked for sure by the former president. But rather than extinguish those flames, Biden’s administration is doing the equivalent of throwing chip fat into the fire.


First, the way to deal with a surge in unaccompanied minors is not to buttress legal provisions. The sensible and humane thing would be to allow passage for their parents and guardians to safely enter the country in order to have their asylum claims processed together as families. The sanctity of families should be protected at all costs.

While many Democrats might choose to blame the migration crisis on the Trump era, that’s too easy. Biden’s administration has the power to rescind Title 42 whenever it wishes. Yet Title 42 remains in place despite Biden promising to break from such policies, and in the face of demands from the UN and countless other humanitarian groups demanding its removal. Furthermore, with the availability of vaccines, covid is no longer an excuse to maintain racist border policies.

In recent days, four United Nations agencies have warned against the dangers of deporting Haitians arriving at the border back to Haiti. Instability in the island nation is serious. Experts highlight food shortages, gang violence and political turmoil in the wake of the assassination of a former president. Haiti still suffers from the after-effects of its most recent earthquake. The US special envoy there resigned, citing the treatment of Haitians at the southern border.  

The people of Haiti, mired in poverty, hostage to the terror, kidnappings, robberies and massacres of armed gangs and suffering under a corrupt government with gang alliances, simply cannot support the forced infusion of thousands of returned migrants lacking food, shelter, and money without additional, avoidable human tragedy.

If the conditions outlined by Daniel Foote and UN agencies don’t justify the chance to safely claim asylum, then what does?

There’s a reason, too, why many are characterizing the treatment of Haitian migrants as anti-Black. From Afghans to Canadian border crossers, other migrants are treated better. The Biden administration’s border policies break the president’s campaign promises. They arguably also break domestic and international law. They are self-evidently morally repugnant, enforced with barbarity. The real reason that such policies exist is, of course, to satisfy America’s insatiable unwarranted paranoia over so-called border security.

The flames of that paranoia were stoked for sure by the former president. But rather than extinguish those flames, Biden’s administration is doing the equivalent of throwing chip fat into the fire. While politicians repeat endless talking points about enforcing  law and safety regarding the border, the reality is that America’s border policies, like the UK, ought to represent a source of national shame. But they don’t. They’ve become mainstream political currency.

By supporting such policies, flag wavers and so-called respectable people are consigning vulnerable people to a death sentence. Deporting people back to places like Haiti could mean exactly that. Such privilege and racism are the opposite of democracy. 

What certainly is a cornerstone of democracy, however, is protest.

And that’s what demonstrators did recently, outside the home of Alejandro Mayorkas, demanding Biden’s administration make good on promises to undo damage already done. They want an end to Title 42, the rule allowing the deportation of people suspected of having covid.

It’s clear by now that relentless pressure must be applied to force the right thing. As it stands, human rights and human dignity remain buzzwords repeated by President Biden and his predecessors. Decent democrats and Democrats need to rally and demand that Biden’s administration reverse the inhumane border policies. 

It’s tiring having to constantly argue that Black people are humans deserving of fair treatment under the law. One day, Haitian kids will grow up, becoming our future. What do we tell them to explain their treatment and that of their parents? That it was the law, a government policy? That democracy was a nice idea, applicable to some?


Richard Sudan covers human rights and American foreign affairs for the Editorial Board. Based in London, his reporting has appeared in The Guardian, Independent and others. Find him @richardsudan.

1 Comments

  1. Bern on October 21, 2021 at 3:57 pm

    Weird it is that so-called conservatives in this country disparage the sorts of bootstrapping people who show by their actions that they would be among the hardest-working, stable, family-oriented citizens this country has, if they were only allowed the chance.

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