Through the brush: A migrant teen mom's journey across the U.S.-Mexico
border
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[March 18, 2021]
By Mimi Dwyer
PENITAS, Texas (Reuters) - Mayra stepped
from her hiding place in the dense brush on the banks of the Rio Grande,
the river that marks the border between the United States and Mexico, as
the sun came up on Wednesday morning. The 17-year-old migrant from
Guatemala had her one-year-old son, Marvin, swaddled in a blanket on her
back.
They had crossed the river hours earlier in the dark on small rafts with
a group of about 70 migrants - mostly Guatemalan and Honduran women with
young children and about 25 teenagers traveling alone. Mayra hoped that
as a teen mother she would be allowed to stay in the United States.
The group is among thousands of migrants who have been crossing the
U.S.-Mexico border in recent weeks, creating a political and
humanitarian challenge for the new Biden administration as it tries to
house the arriving migrants in government facilities during the
coronavirus pandemic.
The number of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border this year is
on pace to be the highest in 20 years, one of U.S. President Joe Biden's
top officials said this week. As of Tuesday, about 9,200 unaccompanied
children were in custody of the Office of Refugee Resettlement, the
government agency that houses migrant children.
Children's clothes, shoes, and plastic water jugs littered the ground of
the private ranchland in Penitas, south Texas, where Mayra's group first
made landfall after crossing the river, evidence of the migrants who had
crossed in the days and weeks before them.
Now, the teens and parents set out on the final leg of their journey:
walking to the U.S. border wall to wait for U.S. border patrol agents to
take them into custody.
Mayra made her way down the dirt road in between cotton fields on the
way to the tall, imposing rusted metal slats that make up the wall.
Marvin grasped at her, exhausted and crying.
"I heard there was an opportunity to come," she said. "I heard on the
news that mothers with their babies and minors could come."
When a neighbor offered to help pay for her journey, she felt she had no
choice. Her father was dead and her mother's health was starting to
fail. She was earning only $5 U.S. dollars per day sowing corn,
sometimes taking side work washing clothes. Marvin's father had also
disappeared. "He abandoned us," she said through tears. "We have
nothing."
The group had spent the final night of their journey on the floor of an
empty building on a farm near the river north of Reynosa, Mexico. "We
slept like animals," one young mother said.
'NOW IT'S FINALLY REAL'
Word is spreading in Central America that minors and mothers of young
children can enter the country, the migrants said, prompting them to
take the weeks-long journey in buses, on foot, and in the back of trucks
to arrive at the Rio Grande.
Biden says he wants to pursue a more humane immigration policy than the
hardline policies of his predecessor, President Donald Trump. He has
begun to allow in children who are not traveling with a parent or legal
guardian, though he has left in place a Trump-era public health order
that closed the border to the vast majority of asylum seekers.
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Mayra, a 17 year old asylum seeking mother from Guatemala, carries
her 13 month old son Marvin after they crossed the Rio Grande river
into the United States from Mexico on a raft in Penitas, Texas,
U.S., March 17, 2021. Picture taken on March 17, 2021. REUTERS/Adrees
Latif
Some families with young children have also been released in recent
weeks into the United States in part because the local government of
Tamaulipas across from southern Texas has refused to accept their
return.
Still, Biden administration officials have urged migrants not to
make the dangerous journey north, stressing that the border is not
open and that most people crossing the border illegally will be
deported.
Keiby, a 17-year-old Honduran, was the first among Mayra's group to
arrive at the border wall. There was an open gate with no patrol
agents in sight, so she walked through and sat down to rest. She had
heard she could be sent to a shelter for a few weeks before
rejoining her family in the United States.
She was eager to get to her mother, whom she had not seen for 14
years. "It's been all this time," she said. "Now it's finally real.
Thank God."
Members of the U.S. military arrived in a truck soon afterward and
offered water bottles to the migrants. A border patrol truck pulled
up and agents stepped out. "I would say we're gonna need a bus," one
agent said. "It looks like there's gonna be a lot of them."
More agents arrived, separating out the unaccompanied minors, mostly
teenagers, from those traveling as families, asking each migrant
their age and nationality.
"You sure you're a minor?" one asked a woman who said she was nearly
18. She looked older, he said, and it would be better for her to
tell the truth now. She rummaged through her bag for a piece of
paper that would prove her age.
Border patrol lined up the minors likely to be traveling without
legal guardians against trucks and vans and sat the families up
against the wall. They took down the children's information, handing
them bags to place their belongings in and instructing them to
remove their shoelaces.
At the end of the line of minors stood Mayra, consoling her young
son with a blue toy car. Overwhelmed and in tears, she nursed Marvin
and waited for border patrol agents to approach her.
"I hope they'll let me go to my sister," she said.
She has family in New York and is eager to start a life there, to
provide for her child and send money back to her mother in Guatemala
to buy the medicine she needs.
(Reporting by Mimi Dwyer, Editing by Ross Colvin and Aurora Ellis)
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