MEXICO CITY — A group of human rights lawyers is suing Costa Rica, alleging the Central American nation violated the rights of dozens of migrant children by detaining them in a rural camp for nearly two months after they were deported from the U.S. in February.
The children, some as young as 2, are part of a group of hundreds of migrants from mostly Asian countries — Afghanistan, China, Russia and others — who were deported from the U.S. as part of a wider effort by the Trump administration to ramp up deportations.
Many had hoped to seek asylum in the U.S. and expressed fear over returning to their own countries. Instead, they were dropped in Costa Rica and Panama, where they don't speak the local language. The countries were originally intended as a kind of deportation layover, but the migrants have now spent 50 days in limbo.
Critics described it as a way for the U.S. to export its deportation process, while human rights groups have warned that the two countries were turning into a ''black hole'' for deportees.
In Costa Rica, around 200 migrants, 81 of them children, were driven out to a rural migrant processing center along the Costa Rica-Panama border and detained in a former factory building.
The lawsuit from the Global Strategic Litigation Council and other human right groups was filed before the U.N. committee that monitors the implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child on Thursday night, and alleges that Costa Rica violated the convention.
Silvia Serna Roman, one of the attorneys filing the suit, said the migrants were held in detention without legal status, with no access to educational services or mental health services in their native language. It has fueled concern the long-term impacts that extended detention could have on the children as many parents have reported their children appearing isolated or sad.
''The kids are in a very crucial part of their development, and they are all fleeing complicated contexts in their countries. And now they're subjected to detention for different, but long periods of time and inhumane treatment,'' Serna Roman said Friday. ''The parents are concerned.''