As Biden winds down Mexico program, many migrants on U.S. border left in
limbo
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[March 12, 2021]
By Mimi Dwyer
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe
Biden has moved swiftly to start dismantling a cornerstone of former
President Donald Trump's hardline immigration policy, a program that
sent thousands of asylum seekers back to Mexico to await their
immigration court hearings.
Biden's focus on ending the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) - under
which 65,000 migrants were sent back to Mexico - fulfills a key election
campaign promise, but it leaves thousands of migrants not in the program
unsure of their fate, migrants, attorneys and activists told Reuters.
Some of those migrants not in the program have been waiting along the
U.S.-Mexico border longer than those who were enrolled in MPP after they
were caught crossing the border illegally. Now, migrants with active MPP
cases are eligible to claim asylum in the United States. The exact
number of non-MPP asylum seekers along the border is not clear because
there is no single record of them, but advocates say there could be
thousands.
The president's focus on MPP is not surprising - it was one of Trump's
most controversial immigration policies, and Biden denounced it on the
campaign trail.
Trump said the program aimed to curb the release of thousands of
migrants who had entered the United States to claim asylum. But migrant
groups said many of those people were forced to live in squalor in
Mexico and were vulnerable to violence, including kidnappings and
extortion.
In the rush to get rid of the program, attorneys and activists say one
unintended effect is that non-MPP asylum seekers who have spent months
and even years at the border have been left in limbo. Advocates are now
pressing the U.S. government to allow these asylum seekers entry into
the United States to make their claims.
The issue highlights the challenges facing the Biden administration as
it seeks to reform immigration policies, while also emphasizing that not
everyone who comes to the border will be granted asylum.
Republicans and critics have coalesced around the message that Biden has
implemented an open-border policy. Biden officials, however, are
discouraging migrants from making their way to the United States,
stating that the majority of people who arrive will be turned away.
The White House referred questions to the Department of Homeland
Security, which said in a statement that the "system to process
individuals with active MPP cases is the first phase of a program to
restore safe and orderly processing at the southwest border."
It declined to elaborate on when or if asylum seekers without active MPP
cases would be allowed to claim asylum in the United States.
'THE LIST'
Angeles, a Nicaraguan mother of two who asked that Reuters use her
middle name for her safety, is one of the asylum seekers not in MPP.
She has been waiting with her family in the Mexican city of Tijuana for
15 months after fleeing her country for political persecution.
Afraid of kidnappings, the family rarely goes outside their home and
struggles to buy basic necessities like food. Her husband works as a
mechanic in exchange for a room for his family. Angeles' children, aged
15 and 7, are not in school, and her eldest son is sleeping poorly.
Despite her family's difficult situation, Angeles says she wants to
enter the United States legally. In November 2019, she added her family
to "La Lista," - The List - an informal, handwritten book maintained by
migrants on the Mexican side of the border. Administrators recorded the
names of thousands of migrants and gave them numbers as they waited
their turn to make asylum claims to U.S. officials.
She and her family got two numbers - 4,465 and 4,466 - on two scraps of
paper. For more than a year, that has been their only clue about when
they could enter the country.
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A migrant is seen at a provisional campsite outside El Chaparral
border crossing, hoping to cross and request asylum in the U.S, in
Tijuana, Mexico February 27, 2021. REUTERS/Jorge Duenes/
La Lista was borne out of another policy embraced by Trump called
"metering," which limited how many migrants could seek asylum each
day at U.S. ports of entry. The Strauss Center, a University of
Texas research organization, estimates that 9,600 people were on La
Lista in Tijuana alone up until it closed in March 2020, though it
is not clear how many of those people are still at the border.
But Angeles' family never got called. After the COVID-19 outbreak,
the United States sealed the southern border to the vast majority of
asylum seekers. Angeles doesn't know whether her family's numbers
mean anything anymore.
"I just want an answer, for them to tell me, 'Look, come present
yourself on this day,' even if they interviewed me and gave me a
number and told me to come back," Angeles said. "But I have
nothing."
"There's basically almost no access to asylum for people who are not
in the MPP program," said Ginger Cline, a lawyer who represents
migrants in Tijuana with Al Otro Lado, an immigration nonprofit
group. "It's an issue because there are now thousands of people who
are waiting in dangerous border cities who don't have access to
basic needs."
BLACK MIGRANTS FACE UNCERTAINTY
Tijuana also has a large population of Haitian migrants as well as
migrants who traveled from Africa. They are particularly vulnerable
to extortion and racism, migrants and advocates say. They, too, have
been left in limbo as MPP was mostly limited to Spanish-speaking
asylum seekers.
"The situation is really difficult for those of African descent,"
said Katerine Giron, an organizer with Espacio Migrante, a migrant
community organization in Tijuana.
The Biden administration "has not done anything for Black immigrants
except continuing the cruel and inhumane system that existed before
Trump but heightened under Trump," said Guerline Jozef, executive
director of the Haitian Bridge Alliance, an activist group which
provides humanitarian assistance to migrants along the border and in
the United States.
The group estimates there are about 5,000 Black immigrants in
Tijuana, and 10,000-15,000 border-wide.
The White House and DHS did not respond to questions about how its
approach to unwinding MPP is affecting Black migrants.
In the absence of clarity from the U.S. government, hundreds of
asylum seekers have begun camping near the port of entry in Tijuana,
hoping to make their asylum claims.
The camp has swelled to about 1,500 people since mid-February, said
Alex Mensing, a Tijuana-based immigration advocate with Innovation
Law Lab who is part of a coalition that has been trying to help
migrants coming to the port of entry.
The expansion of the camp comes as U.S. officials have declared that
the swift processing of MPP claimants has allowed Mexico to close
the sprawling Matamoros camp on the border that was the most visible
symbol of Trump's crackdown on migration from Central America.
Mensing's group had counted 241 tents at the port as of Tuesday.
Many people camping out do not have active MPP cases but have spent
more than a year at the border.
"There’s almost universally this idea that it doesn't make sense to
let some asylum seekers in and not others," Mensing said. "They do
not see that as fair."
(Reporting by Mimi Dwyer; editing by Ross Colvin and Aurora Ellis)
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