U.S. borders reopen, but not for asylum seekers stuck in Mexico
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[November 09, 2021]
By Kristina Cooke, Mica Rosenberg and Caitlin O'Hara
NOGALES, Mexico (Reuters) - Leo fled his
hometown in southern Mexico after his uncle was murdered by gang members
and he received death threats. Earlier this year, he, his wife and their
two children headed to the U.S.-Mexico border hoping to claim asylum.
After months of waiting, he hoped he would finally get his chance on
Monday. But even as U.S. borders opened for travelers vaccinated against
COVID-19, they remained closed to asylum seekers.
When Leo, 23, and his family approached the port of entry in Nogales,
Mexico with his and his wife's vaccination cards in hand, they were told
by a border official they could not enter and seek asylum.
"I feel dispirited and sad," said Leo, who asked his last name not be
published for fear of reprisals from the gang he fled. President Joe
Biden "is just continuing the same policies of Donald Trump."
Biden has kept in place a controversial U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) order, first implemented by his Republican
predecessor Trump in March 2020, that allows migrants to be immediately
expelled without an opportunity to seek asylum.
The Biden administration has said the CDC's order, known as Title 42,
remains necessary to prevent the spread of COVID-19, as asylum seekers
are processed in crowded settings at the border.
Any foreign national attempting to enter the United States without
proper documentation will be subject to expulsion regardless of
vaccination status, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
Advocates have criticized the Biden administration's continuation of the
expulsion policy as borders reopen.
The idea that a vaccinated asylum seeker is more of a risk than a
vaccinated tourist is laughable, said Noah Gottschalk, global policy
lead with Oxfam America, one of the advocacy groups suing the Biden
administration to overturn the Title 42 order. Gottschalk said the
exclusion of vaccinated asylum seekers strengthens the group's argument
that the policy isn't about public health.
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Leo and Nancy, fully vaccinated migrants from southern Mexico and
their sons Alexander, 2, and Gael, 1, return to Nogales, Sonora,
Mexico after they were told by U.S. Customs and Border Protection
agents that they cannot seek asylum after the U.S. reopened land
borders to vaccinated travelers for the first time since coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) restrictions were imposed, in Nogales, Mexico
November 8, 2021. Picture taken November 8, 2021. REUTERS/Caitlin
O'Hara
In September, a federal judge ordered the Biden
administration to stop expelling family units - parents or legal
guardians arriving with their children - under the Title 42 order.
The administration appealed, and a higher court put the judge's
ruling on hold as the case moves forward.
Last month, more than 1,300 medical professionals signed letters to
the CDC urging it to end the border expulsions order, saying it
lacked epidemiological evidence to justify it and put migrants at
risk.
New York-based nonprofit Human Rights First has documented more than
7,600 kidnappings and other attacks on migrants stuck in Mexico who
were blocked from entering the United States since Biden took office
in January.
Leo has been working in construction to pay rent in Nogales, but he
says his earnings are not enough to support his family. "They abuse
you because they know you are not from here, they pay you what they
want," he said.
He is also worried about his children getting hit by a stray bullet
when gunshots ring out at night. The U.S. State Department
recommends Americans reconsider travel to the Mexican state of
Sonora, where Nogales is located, due to crime and kidnapping.
"We were fleeing a place that was dangerous," said Leo. "And here it
is the same."
(Reporting by Kristina Cooke in San Francisco, Mica Rosenberg in New
York and Caitlin O'Hara in Nogales, Mexico; Editing by Mary Milliken
and Karishma Singh)
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