Mexican migrants removed from border camp after family separation threat
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[January 08, 2020]
By Julio-Cesar Chavez
CIUDAD JUAREZ (Reuters) - Mexican
authorities on Tuesday removed almost 100 Mexican migrants seeking
asylum in the United States from a camp in downtown Ciudad Juarez,
across the border from El Paso, Texas, according to a Reuters witness,
after state police threatened to separate parents from their children.
Ciudad Juarez has been received growing numbers of Mexicans seeking to
apply for asylum in the United States, leading to a backlog in the city
as U.S. border officials limit the number of asylum cases they receive
at the port of entry each day.
The operation came a day after news that the United States will deport
some Mexican asylum seekers to Guatemala.
Mexican authorities have for months tried to move the migrants from
outdoor camps into shelters, citing cold weather, as temperatures
dropped below freezing. The 93 Mexicans had so far declined the offer.
In a video recorded Monday night by a Mexican migrant, a man identifies
himself as part of the Chihuahua state police and accuses the migrants,
who have been camping near the border crossing for months, of neglecting
their children.
Reuters has seen the video but did not witness that incident.
In the video, the man orders the migrants to leave the camp by Tuesday
and move to a shelter. He then threatens to separate the parents from
their children.
"Tomorrow, we'll be here and if you don't obey, you'll be arrested and
your children will be taken to family services," he said. "Now, whatever
family services does is up to them, whether they keep your children in
Juarez or take them out of the state."
A spokesman for the state prosecutor's office confirmed to Reuters that
the man in the video was one of their officials but denied that the
migrants were threatened.
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Mexican asylum seekers camping near the Paso del Norte international
border crossing bridge while waiting to apply for asylum to the U.S.
are evicted by the local government, who will move them to a local
shelter, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico January 7, 2020. REUTERS/Jose Luis
Gonzalez
"He at no moment threatened them - he forewarned them, which is
different," the spokesman said. "There were around 10 complaints
from family services who had come to the prosecutor's office and
said these people were being neglectful toward their children."
The migrant from the Mexican state of Guerrero, who declined to give
her name for security reasons, but recorded the incident on her cell
phone, said two more state police officers arrived to support the
first officer.
The woman and her husband said they had been waiting four months to
cross into the United States to apply for asylum, but with only a
few days left before their turn for a hearing was due they wanted to
stay put. The family of five eventually relocated to a shelter
together with the other migrants.
Ciudad Juarez officials, including Rogelio Pinal, head of the city's
human rights office, on Tuesday afternoon led the migrants onto
shuttles to a single shelter and dismantled the tents.
"It's better to take them willingly and not force them," Pinal said.
Some migrants disagreed. "It's not what we want to do, but we have
to do it anyway," one migrant said.
(Reporting by Julio-Cesar Chavez; Writing by Stefanie Eschenbacher;
Editing by Frank Jack Daniel and Leslie Adler)
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