Migrants 'knock at front door' for asylum
after Trump crackdown
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[June 25, 2018]
By Anthony Esposito and Lizbeth Diaz
TIJUANA/REYNOSA, Mexico (Reuters) - More
Mexicans and Central Americans are lining up to make asylum requests at
the U.S.-Mexico border as word spreads of a U.S. crackdown on families
crossing illegally and the threat of brutal gangs lying in wait if they
go it alone.
Officials at shelters in border cities as well as migrants from Mexico
and Central America told Reuters there was a rising number of people
waiting, often for weeks, to make asylum pleas to immigration
authorities at official border crossings.
Many of the dozens of migrants interviewed by Reuters said they decided
to present an official asylum request after hearing about parents being
separated from children when crossing the U.S. border illegally, and
about friends making successful requests.
Following an outcry at home and abroad over his administration's "zero
tolerance" policy, U.S. President Donald Trump issued an executive order
last week to end the family separations. But over 2,000 children are yet
to be reunited with their parents.
The migrants, many with children in tow, told harrowing tales of
kidnapping, extortion and murder by gangs in Mexico and Central America.
That threat was enough to inspire the perilous journey in hope of
receiving asylum in the United States.
"They don't go through the mountains or deserts anymore, they go to the
front door," said Victor Clark Alfaro, a migration expert at San Diego
State University.
But their chances of asylum may be diminishing.
On June 11, U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions overturned a grant of
asylum to a Salvadoran domestic abuse victim, potentially excluding
immigrants seeking refuge from sexual, gang and other forms of violence
in their homelands.
Those threats were the basis of a "credible fear" argument that could
prevent them from being returned.
That risk has yet to deter migrants.
WAITING GAME
Shelters run by charities in Reynosa, Tijuana and Nogales - Mexican
cities separated by hundreds of miles along the border - all reported an
uptick in migrant asylum seekers.
Marla Conrad, a coordinator at the Kino Border Initiative in Nogales,
said that so far this month, she had seen about an extra 100 people
lining up for asylum compared with May.
At the border in Tijuana, 26-year-old Jose Cortes from El Salvador,
traveling with his 5-year-old daughter, said the waiting list to request
asylum was now 1,150 people long. When he arrived two weeks ago, it had
1,000 names on it.
Migrants manage the waiting list, a task currently with Cortes. When his
turn comes to cross into the United States for an asylum interview, he
will pass the list to another migrant.
It is growing even as 30 to 60 people are called up daily to plead their
cases with U.S. border agents.
Mexican Jacqueline Moreno, 43, said that as recently as December, her
daughter managed to cross and successfully request asylum on the same
day. Now, fleeing violence in her home state of Michoacan with her son,
13, Moreno said she had been waiting three weeks.
MANY MORE PEOPLE
Some migrants followed tips from their hometowns about how to seek
asylum. Others paid thousands of dollars to people smugglers, or
"coyotes," who assured them a case could be made.
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A Honduran migrant child plays with a football at the Senda de Vida
migrant shelter in Reynosa, in Tamaulipas state, Mexico June 22,
2018. Picture taken June 22, 2018. REUTERS/Daniel Becerril
Many stay near the border in spartan shelters, with rows of brightly
colored tents, or in dingy hotels often charging prices they
struggle to pay.
Patricia Flores and her 7-year-old son are among thousands of
Central Americans waiting at the border.
After witnessing a gangland killing in their neighborhood, Flores
decided to pay $4,000 to a human smuggler who told her she could
just get to the border and ask for asylum.
Flores has been desperately trying to get a meeting at the border
but said she had been turned away by Mexican officials.
Her son described how he saw his neighbor shot in the head back in
El Salvador.
"My mom said it's our secret but if I tell anyone, I am going to go
to heaven. I don't want to," he said, adding he was not afraid.
Pointing to his green T-shirt with a cartoon on it, he said that was
his "bulletproof jacket."
Adelia Contini, from Brazil, has run a church-funded shelter for
women and children in Tijuana for nine years. She too has noticed a
increase in asylum seekers.
"Since 2013, we started seeing more people asking for asylum, but
not as much as now," she said. "Since January, there are many more
people, more than last year."
'WAITING TO KILL US'
Encouraged by relatives and friends in the United States, Honduran
Lorena Mejia has been waiting for two weeks in a shelter in Reynosa
near the banks of the Rio Grande with her husband and four children
to apply for asylum.
Returning home did not bear thinking about, Mejia said, explaining
that she and her family had been threatened because they witnessed a
massacre in Honduras a few years ago.
"We can't go back there. They're waiting to kill us," the
31-year-old said, adding that two other witnesses had already been
murdered. "We have to get in."
Sharon Melissa Analco, 23, arrived in Tijuana on Friday with her
5-year-old daughter, fleeing kidnappers terrorizing her family in
Acapulco in the violent Mexican state of Guerrero.
Analco said she had no money to pay for her stay, having expected to
be able to get right into the United States. But a U.S. official
turned her away at the crossing, telling her she would have to put
her name on a list and wait her turn.
"I can't wait out there," she recalled telling the official, weeping
on the plaza next to the border. "I'm in danger."
(Reporting by Anthony Esposito and Lizbeth Diaz; Writing by Michael
O'Boyle and Anthony Esposito; Editing by Dave Graham, Daniel Flynn
and Peter Cooney)
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