U.S.-Mexico border reopens after 20 months of COVID disruption
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[November 08, 2021]
By Lizbeth Diaz
TIJUANA, Mexico (Reuters) - Dozens of
crossings at the Mexico-United States border reopened to non-essential
travel on Monday after a 20-month closure due to the COVID-19 pandemic,
though life is not quite back to normal yet along the 2,000 mile (3,200
kilometer) frontier.
Ahead of reopening, hundreds of cars formed lines stretching back
kilometers from the border at the Mexican city of Tijuana, while queues
at pedestrian crossings grew steadily.
Still, differing rules over coronavirus vaccines threaten to hold up
family reunions, while the prospect of some curbs easing has also
encouraged migrants to try their luck seeking U.S. asylum, posing a new
test for the Biden administration.
Maria Luisa Gonzalez, a California resident who visited Tijuana on
Friday to take her Chihuahua puppy to the vet and see relatives, was
losing patience as she waited to drive back through San Diego at the San
Ysidro port of entry on Sunday.
"The operations to speed things up aren't working," Gonzalez said,
visibly frustrated. "The road diverted me twice, the signs they posted
are very confusing."
Anticipating heavy road use after reopening, Tijuana city council this
week said it had re-routed traffic in some streets, but some residents
were unclear where to go.
Tijuana's border with San Diego is one of the busiest in the world, with
thousands crossing to work, study or shop daily.
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Lorena Hernandez hugs her daughter Oralia Perez, for the first time
since March 2020, after the U.S. reopens its border for people
inoculated against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) with vaccines
approved by the World Health Organization (WHO), in El Paso, Texas,
U.S. November 8, 2021. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez
But some inoculated Mexicans will not be able to
enter the United States immediately if they received vaccines in
Mexico that have not been approved by the World Health Organization
such as China's CanSino and Russia's Sputnik V.
"I never imagined that because I got the CanSino vaccine I wouldn't
be able to cross," lamented Donato Suarez, a driver at a private
university in Tijuana who had hoped to visit relatives in the United
States he has not seen for nearly two years.
"We even had plans to do something when the border reopened," he
added, noting around 300 people where he works are in the same
predicament. "We'll have to wait."
(Reporting by Lizbeth Diaz; Editing by Michael Perry)
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