Exclusive: U.S. seeks Latin American help
amid rise in Asian, African migrants
Send a link to a friend
[August 17, 2016]
By Julia Edwards
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Washington is
seeking closer coordination with several Latin American countries to
tackle a jump in migrants from Asia, Africa and the Middle East who it
believes are trying to reach the United States from the south on an
arduous route by plane, boat and through jungle on foot.
U.S. agents deployed to an immigration facility on Mexico's southern
border have vetted the more than 640 migrants from countries outside the
Americas who have been detained at the center since October 2015,
according to U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) documents
reviewed by Reuters.
The migrants often fly to Brazil, obtain fake passports there, and are
smuggled to Panama before heading through Central America to Mexico's
porous southern border, according to transcripts of 14 interviews
conducted at the center and other internal briefing documents seen by
Reuters.
(Graphic: From Brazil to the north: http://tmsnrt.rs/2b8JIDI)
The U.S. agents' findings come as Mexican immigration data show 6,342
Asian, African and Middle Eastern migrants were apprehended trying to
enter Mexico in the first six months of this year. That was up from
4,261 in all of 2015, and 1,831 in 2014.
U.S. border apprehensions point to the same trend. Between October 2015
and May 2016, U.S. agents apprehended 5,350 African and Asian migrants
at the U.S. Southwest border. That's up from 6,126 in all of fiscal year
2015 and 4,172 in all of fiscal year 2014.
U.S. concerns about potential security risks from migrants using the
unusual and circuitous southern route have been growing in recent years,
following a string of Islamic State-inspired attacks in the West and the
surge in Syrian refugees fleeing that country's civil war.
Five Syrian nationals detained in Honduras last November were part of a
wider group of seven Syrians who acquired forged passports in Brazil and
then went by land to Argentina on their way north, a U.S. government
source familiar with that case said. There was no evidence to suggest
the men were militants.
“The reality is that the vast majority of the people that Mexico
encounters that are extra-continental will eventually end up on our
border," a U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) official said.
At the detention camp in Tapachula, near Mexico's border with Guatemala,
U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents have been training their Mexican
counterparts on interview techniques, and using U.S. criminal databases
to investigate detainees, according to internal documents seen by
Reuters.
Two to three U.S. agents have been stationed there since at least
October, according to the documents and U.S. officials. Mexican
officials have previously acknowledged the presence of U.S. agents at
Mexico's southern border, but few details of the cooperation have been
reported.
U.S. Customs and Border Patrol began a pilot program for a similar
operation in Panama earlier this fiscal year, according to an internal
memo sent in May that has not previously been reported. Homeland
Security officials told Reuters that Panama requested U.S. training. A
spokesman for Panama's National Migration Service said Panama accepted
an offer from the U.S. embassy for training on subjects like "defense
techniques" and "management of persons."
U.S. proponents of the program have pushed for a greater U.S. footprint
to build a "comprehensive intelligence picture" of migration patterns
across the Colombia-Panama border, according to the memo sent in May.
Panama is leading the effort in Central America to detain illegal
migrants, DHS assistant secretary for international affairs Alan Bersin
told a House committee in March, but it stymied by lack of detention
space and the difficulty of deporting migrants to countries with whom
they have no diplomatic ties. As a result, most are released after 30
days.
Bersin acknowledged the rise in migrants from outside the Americas and
the potential security threat they pose.
"While many citizens of these countries migrate for economic reasons or
because they are fleeing persecution in their home countries, this group
may include migrants who are affiliated with foreign terrorist
organizations, intelligence agencies, and organized criminal
syndicates," Bersin told the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
DHS has deployed additional "mentor" teams throughout South and Central
America to professionalize immigration authorities and gain intelligence
about potentially threatening migrants, said DHS officials, who declined
to specify which countries host U.S. agents.
Another DHS official said the agency is asking Brazil through diplomatic
channels to put a stop to fake passport manufacturing. Brazilian
officials did not respond to Reuters' request for comment.
The U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, a unit of DHS, is "actively working
to enhance regional collaboration with border and customs authorities
from Mexico all the way down to Argentina," a DHS official said.
[to top of second column] |
Customs and Border Patrol Port Director for San Ysidro Sidney Aki
(R) speaks to the media during tour of the new pedestrian port of
entry from Mexico to the United States in San Ysidro, California,
U.S. June 30, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
ON FOOT IN THE JUNGLE
The apprehension documents from the Tapachula center show how
migrants are willing and able to pay thousands of dollars to obtain
flights and fake passports and then make grueling journeys on buses,
boats and on foot.
It was not clear how many of those apprehended at the center were
deported, claimed asylum or simply released.
Several of the 14 migrants -- in testimony given from May 18-23 this
year -- said they paid more than $10,000 to smugglers, walked for
days through jungles, and were temporarily detained by various
countries before being stopped in Tapachula.
Six of the men -- who included Pakistanis, Syrians and Afghans-- had
obtained fake passports, claiming to be from Israel, Morocco,
Belgium or Britain.
In Panama, several of the men said they were kept in a migration
detention camp for about a month. From Panama, the migrants
described traveling in larger groups, sometimes as many as 50 men.
One Pakistani national -- whose identity U.S. officials asked not to
be revealed because he is still under investigation -- told U.S. and
Mexican officials that he paid a smuggler in Pakistan $9,000 to be
smuggled to Brazil where he received a fake Belgian passport.
In Brazil, he paid $4,000 to a woman to be taken on bus, boat and on
foot through across Colombia and into Panama.
He said he was detained in Panama but then released. From there, a
smuggler from Lebanon took the man and 35 other migrants of
different nationalities to Honduras, where he said he was robbed of
all of his belongings.
His family wired him more money from Pakistan and the man was able
to pay $40 to be smuggled into Guatemala. He paid $5 to be taken by
raft into Mexico. There he got a taxi, which was halted by
authorities who took him to the Tapachula center.
SENSITIVE TOPIC FOR MEXICO
Accepting U.S. help on immigration issues is politically sensitive
for Mexico, said Adam Isacson, a security and border policy analyst
at The Washington Office on Latin America, a non-profit human rights
advocacy group.
"But the Mexicans have quietly been open to the equipment and
training they have received," he said.
A CBP spokesman said the agency deployed to Tapachula at the Mexican
government's request. Mexico's immigration agency is the Instituto
Nacional de Migracion (INM).
"CBP personnel train INM officers in the collection of biometric
information, and review and share biometric information on people of
interest," the spokesman said.
INM declined Reuters' request for comment and access to the
Tapachula facility.
In testimony before the Mexican Senate on Aug. 3, Mexico's chief
immigration officer Ardelio Vargas Fosado said his agency was aware
of the influx of migrants from outside the Americas. But the lack of
diplomatic relationships between Mexico and many African countries
has made it difficult to deport those apprehended, he said.
Under law, U.S. agents cannot arrest or deport migrants from other
countries, but as foreign-based trainers, they can gather
intelligence on who may be headed for the U.S. border.
Isacson said most of the migrants taking the Latin American path
northward are seeking economic opportunity in the United States. But
DHS is focused on security risks.
"The Tapachula area is along a permeable border. DHS views it as one
of the areas where a terrorist group that wants to do harm on U.S.
soil would be most likely to come in," he said.
(Reporting by Julia Edwards, Additional reporting by Richard Cowan
in Washington, Frank Jack Daniel, Enrique Andres Pretel and Joanna
Bernstein in Mexico; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Stuart
Grudgings)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|