One hundred migrant kids who were separated from their parents at the border are now being housed in New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Wednesday — upping his previous figure of 70.

“This is all run by the federal government and they’re moving the children around the country like chess pieces on a chess board. They had no plan on what to do with that,” the governor said on Fox 5 Wednesday morning.

The kids were shipped to spare beds in the Empire State after being ripped from their moms and dads under the Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” policy to prosecute all adults who cross the border illegally.

Cuomo announced Wednesday that he plans on suing the federal government over the separations — saying at the time that at least 70 of the kids were being held in facilities in the Bronx, Long Island and Westchester.

“The law says a parent and a child have legal rights, even if they are not citizens they have legal rights. They have a right to due process and the courts have held again and again and again the fundamental concept of parental control, care and custody of their child is paramount,” he said.

“And people at the border have that due process right and it’s being violated, so put all the political junk aside, you are taking children from their parents, it’s traumatizing.”

Cuomo said he’s been trying to get the youngsters mental health services, but the feds told him he has to apply for special permission and it’s going to take two weeks.

“Some are in kennels where you wouldn’t put your poodle,” he said when asked if the charities caring for the kids already offer counseling.

“And some are in social services facilities that do have services. But even if they do, you have a 6-year-old, you have a 7-year-old, they don’t speak the language. They’re with their mother and father and then they’re taken away and put in a van and driven away. I mean, this could be a psychological trauma for a lifetime.”