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Transcript
00:00Tonight, Unreported World is from Minneapolis in the United States,
00:04where a surge in immigration raids earlier this year
00:07transformed daily life for thousands of families.
00:10In the immediate aftermath of intensive federal enforcement
00:14across the state, Paul McNamara meets children growing up in fear.
00:18Some parents are too frightened to send their kids to school,
00:21while others have disappeared into a detention system
00:24stretching hundreds of miles from home.
00:26As communities mobilise to protect families and keep children safe,
00:31Paul investigates the hidden human cost of the crackdown.
00:37Across immigrant communities in Minnesota, families are being torn apart.
00:42The terror is real. They are taking children.
00:45As immigration and customs enforcement agents sweep across the state,
00:50tens of thousands of families have been forced into hiding.
00:59Children are living with fear no child should have to carry.
01:02A panic in my chest, and I couldn't breathe at all.
01:06It made me a little sad.
01:09Like as a community, why are we going through this, you know?
01:12It's not fair.
01:14And for some...
01:16Help, papi!
01:17...the American dream they risked everything for is slipping away.
01:41In early December 2025, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, known as ICE,
01:46launched Operation Metro Surge across Minneapolis and St. Paul.
01:51As I arrived two months later,
01:53we're told most of the federal agents are finally leaving,
01:56but I've come to see what this crackdown has left behind,
01:59especially for children.
02:00This should be good news for many people,
02:03but many of those people are still locked down.
02:07They're essentially living like they did during COVID.
02:09And that's bad enough if you're an adult,
02:11but there are kids that are not going to school.
02:15There are kids that have been deprived of their childhood right now.
02:21Newly released data shows that more than 80% of those arrested
02:24during Operation Metro Surge were from Latin American countries.
02:29Hello.
02:30How are you?
02:30Anna Gaia Castilla is a mother of two from Colombia.
02:34She says if her family leaves the house,
02:36she fears they could all be detained and sent hundreds of miles away.
02:41If they take us with our children,
02:43they can send all of us to a detention centre in Texas or Nebraska
02:48with our children.
02:50We can be detained for months, for weeks.
02:52We don't know.
02:54Six years ago, Gaia and her family fled Colombia
02:57after a drug cartel gave her an ultimatum.
02:59Leave and live or stay and be killed.
03:03We came here with a tourist visa and we applied for asylum.
03:07Why did you have to apply for asylum in the first place?
03:10We go through.
03:11My daughter, she was two.
03:13We had 24 hours to live.
03:15So you leave everything behind.
03:17Life is more important.
03:19And then you just have to look for a better future, right?
03:24Gaia and her husband are allowed to stay in the United States
03:26while their asylum claim is being decided.
03:28And they have documents allowing them to work.
03:31But the Trump administration argues that even refugees here lawfully
03:35can still be detained.
03:37What do you do for work?
03:38I work in a company that will fix chimneys.
03:42But because it was an outside job, it was too risky to be outside.
03:47My boss understands that I have to stop.
03:50This is like an American nightmare.
03:54For their eight-year-old daughter, Talasi,
03:56even birthdays have been changed by all this.
04:00What did you get for your birthday?
04:01It was like a short party because of the ice situation.
04:06What's the ice situation?
04:08About how, like, the ice took some children and, like, parents.
04:13We couldn't go outside because we were too scared.
04:18Talasi still goes to school in the suburbs.
04:20But even there, she's finding it hard to cope.
04:23Why did you have a panic?
04:26Because ice, like, ice could take off my mum and my dad
04:30and that, like, made me feel pretty, um, sad
04:35because I didn't want them to go.
04:37But you were just worrying about this
04:39while you were sitting at school?
04:41They know I'm scared of the situation of the ice.
04:46I was pretty scared, too.
04:48It was like a panic in my chest
04:51and I couldn't breathe a little.
04:53That made me a little sad.
04:56You're very brave.
04:57Yes, she is very, very brave.
05:01And I know that our family is going to be safe forever.
05:06Nothing then is going to happen
05:09and that we're going to be safe.
05:12Oh, this is great.
05:15They look pretty good.
05:16They are good.
05:18That little girl's testimony was exceptionally eloquent,
05:22old beyond her years, profound,
05:24and also very, very upsetting.
05:28The biggest thing that worries her day in, day out
05:32and has given her panic attacks
05:33is the fact that when she gets home,
05:37one or other of her parents might not be there
05:39because they might have been arrested by ice.
05:44Anyone to include the press trespassing on federal property
05:47is subjected to arrest.
05:49Operation Metro Surge began in December 2025.
05:53The Department of Homeland Security said
05:55it was targeting violent offenders across Minneapolis.
05:58But critics say many of those caught up were not.
06:01By February, 4,000 people had been arrested across the state.
06:05S.M. S.M.
06:07Protesters took to the streets
06:09and two U.S. citizens, René Goode and Alex Pretty,
06:12were killed by law enforcement.
06:15But being here now,
06:16I'm finding that some of the impact is much less visible.
06:20Many immigrant families are still too scared to leave home,
06:23worried that even a drive to school,
06:25work or the grocery store could end in detention.
06:29For some communities like Gaia's,
06:31that fear is now part of daily life.
06:34The terror is real.
06:36And this is every single day for our families, for our staff.
06:40Gaia still goes out to do her work
06:42at Centro Tyrone Guzman,
06:44the oldest Latin community hub in Minnesota.
06:47They're not even coming here
06:48because it's not worth it.
06:50They can be kidnapped and taken away,
06:52so the risk is not worth it.
06:54And that is probably what's going on.
06:56Like, they know that our community thrives
06:58of being a community.
06:59Yeah.
07:00And right now, it has created isolation.
07:03Xavier Vasquez runs Centro.
07:05He is a U.S. citizen,
07:07but he says that no longer feels like protection.
07:10It doesn't matter at this point.
07:11They have deported citizens, residents.
07:15Centro is home to the only Spanish-language
07:17Montessori preschool in Minnesota.
07:19So here, we're actually entering the school.
07:22Can't help but notice,
07:24there's not very many kids here right now.
07:25No.
07:26There's not even a kid.
07:28No one.
07:29So this is the environment.
07:31Oh, wow.
07:32It's lovely.
07:33But it has been closed for nearly three months.
07:36When it reopens,
07:36staff don't know how many children will come back.
07:40It's fear because families are too afraid
07:43to risk to come to school.
07:46They're not even going to work.
07:47Fear was caused by racism.
07:49It was caused by targeting us.
07:51It was caused by...
07:52Racial profiling.
07:53That's the truth.
07:54Federal officials deny their officers use racial profiling,
07:57saying stops are based on reasonable suspicion.
08:00But many Latin parents have been too scared
08:03to send their children to school,
08:04with some reporting attendance rates below 50%.
08:07They are targeting us.
08:09They are taking hard-working people
08:11that came here looking for opportunities
08:13to give a better future to their families,
08:15just like we did.
08:16They are targeting children.
08:18They are taking children.
08:19That is scary and that is devastating.
08:22That's not what we came here for.
08:27The Department of Homeland Security
08:29denies that ICE targets schools or children.
08:32But in the first nine months of President Trump's second term,
08:35more than 3,800 children were booked into detention.
08:39By early February,
08:41Immigration and Customs Enforcement
08:42was holding almost 70,000 people in detention.
08:45Around three quarters had no criminal conviction on record.
08:50It is very hard to believe, yeah, that we are in America.
08:54Xavier is taking me to meet one of Centro's students,
08:57Helen, and her mother, Marta.
08:59Tomorrow they will self-deport to Ecuador
09:00to hopefully reunite with Helen's father,
09:03who is in detention and facing deportation.
09:06The father was taken a little bit over two months ago.
09:11And then after that,
09:12they were evicted from their apartment
09:15and one of our staff members received them in their house.
09:19And then the dad is going to be deported now.
09:22Since moving in with one of Centro's staff,
09:25even a car pulling up outside can feel like a threat.
09:31Yeah, just so you know, we're here, I'd say,
09:33so you don't get scared, that's us.
09:35Okay.
09:38Well, it's not just...
09:40Inside, I meet Marta.
09:42She's been sheltering here for four weeks
09:44with five-year-old Helen.
09:45Have you left the house much?
09:47No hemos podido salir porque yo soy la única
09:50que se quedo cargo de los niños.
09:53Y si me pasaba algo a mí que iba a pasar a ellos,
09:55entonces era el temor de salir,
09:57entonces hemos permanecido prensatados.
09:59Two years ago, the family fled Ecuador
10:01after violence spread through their neighborhood.
10:04They flew to El Salvador,
10:06then walked north to Texas
10:07in search of a safer future.
10:09But with Helen's father now being held in detention
10:12more than 500 miles away,
10:15Marta has decided she must return.
10:17Cuando nosotros dejamos nuestro país,
10:20fue porque en nuestro país
10:23la delincuencia está muy, muy terrible.
10:26Entonces veníamos acá
10:27para poder encontrar un futuro mejor, o sea.
10:30Pero cuando mi esposo fue detenido
10:32y mi esposo lo decía desde la cárcel,
10:34él decía que jamás pensó ser tratado así,
10:37como un delincuente.
10:39Es el padre de mis hijos, es mi esposo,
10:42y tenemos que unir otra vez en la familia.
10:44¿Estás esperando a ver a tu papá?
10:48Sí.
10:49Marta está en el lugar de una decisión imposible para Helen.
10:53Estar en los Estados Unidos sin su padre,
10:55o volver a la violencia que hubiera pasado,
10:58para que la familia pueda estar juntos.
11:00Para algunas familias,
11:02una vez que estás en este sistema,
11:05no hay decisiones fáciles,
11:06solo es elegir la opción más peor.
11:08La mejor opción es la mejor opción,
11:09y ellos están elegir la mejor opción para ellos.
11:13Y no tienen idea cómo es lo que va a funcionar.
11:22Para muchas familias,
11:23incluso la comida ha sido un problema.
11:25Este es donde la magia se ha empezado.
11:28Yo he llegado a Manor Market,
11:30donde Moises y un gran equipo de volunteers
11:32están packingando groceries
11:33para comunitarios de comunidad
11:36para las familias que estaba en el centro.
11:38Todos los días se ve como esto.
11:40En el mañana,
11:42por el final de la mañana,
11:43esta es limpia.
11:44Se está limpio y listo para el siguiente día.
11:47Ahora están ya helping
11:486,500,000
11:51sheltering families a week.
11:534 meses hace,
11:54¿cómo había hecho?
11:554 meses hace,
11:56había alrededor de 2,500
11:58cada mes.
11:59¿Por qué?
12:00Más de 2,000.
12:00Más de 2.000.
12:02Do you see a time anytime soon when demand for your services goes down?
12:07Our operation is never going down.
12:10It's going up and up, and we never say no to the necessity.
12:16Back at Centro, Sandra and her eldest daughter Elsa are volunteering six days a week,
12:21helping distribute supplies from Manor Market to families in need.
12:26It's really hard to see my community going through this.
12:31But what they are seeing is affecting them deeply.
12:35It's hurting a lot of people and families, and it just feels disappointing
12:39because it feels like families are falling apart.
12:42Are there children who are missing from your school?
12:45Yeah, some people are homeschooling because of what's happening, and they're scared to go out.
12:52Are you not scared of being stopped or targeted at all by rice?
12:58I am afraid.
13:00But my need to be there for my community is bigger than my friends.
13:05Yes.
13:06And are you a U.S. citizen?
13:08Yes.
13:09Thank God I am a U.S. citizen.
13:11But I think at this moment, it doesn't matter.
13:17The colour of my skin speaks louder than my citizenship.
13:22Most federal agents are said to have left the city, but few people here believe the danger has passed.
13:28Food drop-offs still have to be carefully timed, with families too frightened to step outside.
13:33Once everything's tied at the door, then she'll open the door for us, and then we'll put things in as
13:38fast as we can, so that that door is closed as soon as possible.
13:41I am going to take this one and the diapers, and I think we should be good.
13:46Okay.
13:47Centro say that ICE agents have previously stopped volunteers while out on delivery.
13:51Sandra is nervous.
13:53But tonight, the coast is clear.
13:56I am here outside.
13:58Everything will be super fast.
14:00The family hiding in this basement haven't left it for two months, since the father was arrested by ICE after
14:06picking up their children from kindergarten.
14:08He's now being held in Iowa, around 250 miles away.
14:13Does your husband have legal status here?
14:16We had work permission, social security and a case of active asylum for the whole family.
14:26Their three children were in the car when he was snatched, and watched him being taken away.
14:31What impact is it having on you and your kids?
14:34Entonces pienso que, y la forma también como él fue llevado, cruelmente castigado, porque se resistió a que se lleven
14:42porque él estaba con los niños.
14:44Is that your daughter?
14:46Does she know where her dad is?
14:48Sí, porque, porque ella estaba, ese día, y ella estaba gritando que no se lo lleven.
14:57Y luego que entonces la hice llevar un último acá en medio de que ella estaba diciendo que no se
15:02lo lleven.
15:04Y así ella vivió todo.
15:06Y dice que si le puedes mandar un mensaje a tu papá.
15:13¡Ay, mamá!
15:25¡Ay, mamá!
15:26¡Ay, mamá!
15:28¡Ay, mamá!
15:29¡Ay, mamá!
15:29Está enojada, así como ahorita, así porque dice,
15:32extraño a mi papá, porque nadie comprende, porque no entienden que...
15:38¿Por qué nadie...
15:39¿Por qué no vuelve?
15:41Que me vamos a killar.
15:43Sandra has seen many families go through this.
15:46It's taking a toll on her too.
15:49You OK?
15:50I'm OK, yes.
15:52My heart needs to be out here.
15:55I am fearful to be out here, but they need me.
15:59Yeah? Yes.
16:01You really do?
16:02They do.
16:19The level of desperation is almost beyond comprehension.
16:24And it's heartbreaking because they're talking about what their children are experiencing.
16:29They're parents that feel like they are unable to protect their children, which is the…
16:36well, it's all parents are meant to do.
16:38Are you so excited?
16:40Yes?
16:41Xavier is gathering children together to throw a goodbye party for Helen,
16:45who's self-deporting with her mother Marta tomorrow.
16:49And who's at the party?
16:51At the party for Helen.
16:53Other families have trusted him to collect their children and take them to school.
16:57He keeps a copy of his U.S. passport with him at all times,
17:00but even this short school run now feels exposed.
17:04Why are we having to pick up these other kids?
17:09They're not able to get out, like their families are not able to get out safely,
17:15because they become targets as soon as they get out.
17:19For Xavier, this feels like a covert operation.
17:22But for the children, it's just a chance to finally see their friends again.
17:25Helen!
17:29Helen!
17:32Helen!
17:33Helen!
17:33Helen!
17:37Helen!
17:43Helen!
17:46Helen!
17:50Helen!
17:53Helen!
17:56Helen!
17:57Hello!
17:58Hello!
18:00Hello!
18:00Hello!
18:01Hello!
18:03It's the first time these children have been back to school for nearly three months,
18:07but the outside world is hard to shut out.
18:10Helen!
18:10I haven't seen anyone here.
18:14What age does Sebastian have you?
18:17Four.
18:18Four.
18:18Four.
18:18He's four years old.
18:20Do you know why we're here?
18:22Helen!
18:24Because we're going to get out of Helen!
18:26Exactly!
18:28And we're going to get out of Helen because she's going to a country called...
18:34Ecuador!
18:35...Ecuador!
18:36Helen is one of at least eight children from the preschool who will not be returning.
18:41What that means for the children left behind is uncertain.
18:45It's not normal for a four or five year old to talk about immigration officers.
18:51It's not normal for them to be saying goodbye to their friend who is self-deporting to a country
18:57that she has no memory of at such a young formative age.
19:01We have no idea what profound impact that will have long term.
19:08Some of the damage is only just beginning to show.
19:12Dr PJ Stryker is a child and adolescent psychiatrist at Children's Minnesota Hospital.
19:17She's worried about the long term effect this is having on children's mental health.
19:21So with younger kids we're seeing a lot of things like not sleeping as well.
19:26They feel more worried.
19:27And then a lot of acting out kind of behaviors, right?
19:30Like irritability, tantrums.
19:32Because they really are struggling to express the tension that they're feeling even if they don't know what that is.
19:39We were definitely seeing kids who are afraid their families are going to not be there when they get home.
19:45And that's manifesting as severe depression.
19:50And it's not just their mental health.
19:52Doctors at this hospital have reported no show rates of up to 50% for children with some of the
19:58most serious physical conditions.
20:00People are not turning up for appointments across the board, right?
20:03Because they're not sure what's going to happen.
20:05And that could be anything from, you know, asthma to cancer treatments.
20:09People are not turning up for cancer appointments.
20:11It's incredibly concerning.
20:12Because then when we see people that are showing up, actually we're having more admissions to the hospital.
20:17Because people are just coming in in sicker states.
20:20If the ice surge actually ended tomorrow, does the problem end just then?
20:26I wish that was so simple.
20:29It's going to take a long time for them to fully heal.
20:32But they will always have that sense of what happened inside them.
20:37For some families, the damage will last long after the surge.
20:41Today, Helen and Marta are returning to Ecuador.
20:45Joining over 600,000 others who have self-deported since October 2025.
20:50How are you feeling about this?
20:52I don't know.
20:53This situation has me where a lot of mixed feelings, you know.
20:58Knowing that I might see Helen for the last time.
21:01I'm meeting Xavier one last time as he drives them to the airport.
21:05How are you feeling about this?
21:06I think it's my new amor.
21:08How do you have your documents and everything?
21:11My passport.
21:12It's going to be strange.
21:14Now, they must say goodbye to the family that took them in and cared for them as their own.
21:20And don't cry, don't cry because there won't be tears.
21:22No, don't cry.
21:25No, don't cry.
21:25Thank you very much for what I did.
21:28I would have done better than you.
21:31Thank you very much.
21:32Bye, Helen.
21:33Bye.
21:34Bye.
21:37As Helen says goodbye to the life she has known here, Marta reflects on the trauma the family has gone
21:42through.
21:44I've cried a lot by God.
21:48Because to come here it cost us almost our lives, the lives of my children and our lives.
21:54And my decision to come back was not something that we decided,
22:00but something that we forced us to do.
22:04That's why my husband was deporting.
22:08As he drives Marta and Helen to the airport, Xavier is overwhelmed.
22:12He's not just losing a child he loves from his school, he's left wondering who will be next.
22:17With everything that has been going on for the last three months, like,
22:21are any of us safe?
22:23Are we going to be safe?
22:27Like, as a community, why are we going through this, you know?
22:33It's not fair.
22:37And we're the ones that have to pay the consequences.
22:42In the airport car park, Helen's father calls from the detention centre where he's still being held.
22:48Hello, my love.
22:49How are you?
22:50Yes, we've already arrived at the airport.
22:53They haven't told you anything if you're going to leave today.
22:55Tomorrow.
22:57All right.
22:59All right.
23:01Yes, all right.
23:03I love you.
23:04I love you, my love.
23:05Bye.
23:06Bye.
23:08Bye.
23:10Bye.
23:12Bye.
23:13They are going back to Ecuador in the hope of being reunited as a family.
23:16But for now, Helen's father remains behind bars.
23:21Very best of luck.
23:23Good luck.
23:24Bye, Helen.
23:25Bye.
23:27For Marta and Helen, like so many other families, the American dream they risked their lives for is over.
23:35Across Minnesota, children are still living in fear and nobody has any idea just how long, if ever, it will
23:43take them to get over this.
23:44It's over the sea.
23:57On the whole way, it's still where it's...
24:02How long the world is they not?
24:04It's as close as they be held onto the sea.
24:04There's nothing left.
24:04And we're trying to embrace the sea.
24:06So, it's only where we should have, and let's see you, and let's see you.
24:06And we're trying to see you.
24:14It's a rapture.
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