Expulsions, releases, hotels: Migrant families at U.S.-Mexico border
face mixed U.S. policies
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[March 23, 2021]
By Mica Rosenberg, Ted Hesson and Mimi Dwyer
DEL RIO, Texas (Reuters) - U.S. officials
are trying to drive home an increasingly emphatic message to the growing
number of mostly Central American asylum seekers crossing the
U.S.-Mexico border every day: "Do not come. The border is closed."
The reality on the ground is less clear.
While the United States is expelling migrant families and individuals to
Mexico under a Trump-era public health order to limit the spread of the
coronavirus, thousands of families have been released into the United
States in recent weeks pending the outcome of their immigration cases.
On the same day Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas went on
five U.S. Sunday television shows to issue the warnings, U.S. border
agents in Texas' Rio Grande Valley began releasing migrant families to
relieve pressure on crowded border facilities without set dates to
appear in immigration court.
The varied handling of families is bewildering migrants and causing
frustration among both immigration advocates and border agents. It has
also left President Joe Biden, a Democrat, open to criticism from
Republicans that his mixed messaging at the border is encouraging more
people to cross even as border facilities fill up past capacity amid the
coronavirus pandemic.
The majority of migrants encountered at the border this year have been
single adults mainly from Mexico who are often quickly deported and
sometimes cross multiple times.
But the number of families arrested nearly tripled in February from a
month earlier to about 19,000. During that same period, the number of
unaccompanied children caught at the border rose as well, but at a
slower pace.
"There is a lot of confusion because there is no hard and fast rule"
when it comes to migrant families, said Charlene D'Cruz, the director of
Lawyers for Good Government's Project Corazon border rights program. "It
seems ad hoc."
Also over the weekend, even as the administration said the border was
closed to families, it announced an $86 million contract to house some
migrant families deemed vulnerable in U.S. hotels for processing. The
contract is part of a new program managed by nonprofit organizations as
an alternative to federal family detention centers.
Online forums are awash with questions from would-be migrants about the
current status of the border and whether families with children are
being allowed to cross. The posts, seen by Reuters, can net over a
hundred often contradictory answers from fellow migrants and some
claiming to be smugglers.
SOME EXPELLED, SOME RELEASED
Mayorkas said on Sunday that only unaccompanied minors were exempt from
the expulsions policy, known as Title 42, that the Trump administration
put in place in March 2020 at the start of the novel coronavirus
pandemic.
But internal U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) data shared with
Reuters showed only around 15% of families apprehended on March 17 were
expelled under Title 42. While just a one-day snapshot, the figure shows
the uneven application of the policy across the border.
One reason: some local authorities in Mexico say they do not have the
resources to deal with the sharp increase in the number of families,
many traveling with very young children.
Tamaulipas state, across from the Rio Grande Valley, stopped receiving
expelled families with children under 7 years of age earlier this year.
In a move that circumvents the Mexican state's refusal, the Biden
administration has begun flying hundreds of families - including parents
traveling with babies and toddlers - hundreds of miles (kilometers)
across Texas to El Paso only to expel them to Ciudad Juarez, according
to Reuters' witnesses and interviews with migrants.
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Stephanie, 10 months old, cries as she is carried by her father
Manuel de Jesus Martinez, an asylum-seeking migrant from Honduras
who was airlifted from Brownsville to El Paso, Texas, and deported
from the U.S. with her, while waiting to be transferred to a shelter
outside the office of the Center for Integral Attention to Migrants
(CAIM) in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico March 18, 2021. Picture taken March
18, 2021. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez
At the same time, U.S. border patrol agents in the same Rio Grande
Valley region - which is experiencing the highest number of
crossings from Mexico - have begun releasing families into the
United States without "notices to appear" in immigration court on
specific dates, according to two CBP officials who requested
anonymity to discuss internal operations.
U.S. Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman Sarah Peck said
that given fluctuating migration flows, "one day or week of
statistics doesn't reflect the full picture," adding that the policy
is still to expel families "and in situations where expulsion is not
possible due to Mexico's inability to receive the families, they are
placed into removal proceedings."
A CBP spokeswoman said all migrants go through routine background
checks before being released.
The Trump administration also released some families without notices
to appear in immigration court during a sharp upsurge in border
crossings in 2019, according to a report published by two research
centers at the University of California, San Diego.
Democratic Congressman Henry Cuellar from Texas released photos on
Monday showing people crammed closely together, some laying on mats
or on the floor in a border patrol facility in Donna, Texas.
Cuellar wrote on Twitter that "more has to be done to address this
growing humanitarian crisis" affecting migrant children.
LUCK OF THE DRAW
The expulsions can be devastating for parents like Manuel de Jesus
Martinez who said he left Honduras in mid-January with his 10-month
old baby daughter after he said her mother was killed.
He crossed the Rio Grande river near the Mexican city of Reynosa
into the United States "because I heard they were giving asylum," he
said in an interview. U.S. border agents put Martinez and his baby
on a flight to El Paso only to expel them back to Mexico.
For other migrant families released into the United States in recent
days, there is a deep sense of relief after long, perilous journeys
from their home countries.
Valin, a Haitian migrant who asked to only be identified by his
first name, was freed from border patrol custody in Del Rio, Texas,
with his wife and two children, a 14-year-old son and a 1-year-old
daughter, just days after they crossed the Rio Grande.
The family had left Haiti in 2016 and slowly made their way to the
border. Valin had feared he and his family would be immediately
deported when they got to the U.S. border. Instead, border patrol
let them go. They hope to stay with relatives in Florida.
"Thank God, we were lucky," he said.
(Reporting by Mica Rosenberg in New York, Ted Hesson in Washington
and Mimi Dwyer in Del Rio, Texas and Kristina Cooke in San
Francisco; Additional reporting by Laura Gottesdiener in Monterrey,
Mexico and Jose Luis Gonzalez in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico; Editing by
Ross Colvin and Aurora Ellis)
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