Expelled from Texas, returned Haitians lament lost American dream
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[September 20, 2021]
By Robenson Sanson and Gessika Thomas
PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) -More than 300
Haitians were returned home on Sunday after the United States ejected
them from Texas, leaving many of the would-be migrants demoralized and
angry that their search for a better life far away from their
impoverished country was over.
U.S. border agents began removing groups of mostly Haitian migrants over
the weekend from a large makeshift camp they had set up after wading
across the Rio Grande separating Mexico and the U.S. state of Texas.
The sprawling camp under the international bridge attracted more than
12,000 migrants at one point, dotted with tents and tarps strung up on
reeds, as many Haitians who had trekked from as far away as Brazil
sought to petition U.S. authorities for entry and to escape rampant
poverty and gang violence afflicting the Caribbean nation.
At the Haitian capital's airport, three flights with 327 returned
Haitians landed on Sunday from Texas, according to a U.S. official with
knowledge of the matter. Several who spoke to Reuters upon arrival said
there were never told where they were being taken.
"I left Haiti to go find a better future," said Stephanie, who declined
to provide her surname. She said she was taken from under the bridge by
U.S. agents to a detention facility before being loaded onto the flight.
She dismissed Haiti's economy as unable to provide opportunities for
scores of youth like her.
"If jobs could be created, we would never have exposed ourselves to this
misery in other countries," she said.
In a video message released Sunday evening, Prime Minister Ariel Henry
pledged to assist the expelled Haitians and bemoaned the "disturbing"
images from the camp.
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Haitian migrants walk together after U.S. authorities flew them out
of a Texas border city on Sunday where thousands of mostly Haitians
had gathered under a bridge after crossing the Rio Grande river from
Mexico, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti September 19, 2021. REUTERS/Ralph
Tedy Erol
"It's with great sorrow that we watch on social
media, through television and listen on the radio to the
tribulations of our brothers and sisters at the border of Mexico and
the United States," he said.
He implored Haitians to build a future where they can "live well in
our country without having to suffer these forms of shame."
But at the airport, returned migrant Mondesir Sirilien explained how
he had spent about $15,000 to leave Haiti, traveling first to Brazil
and then by land to eventually cross the shallow Rio Grande at the
U.S. southern border.
"I could have invested that money here, I could have built a great
business. It's not like we don't know how to do things," he said.
"But we're not respected, we're humiliated and now we don't have
anyone to defend us."
(Reporting by Robenson Sanson and Gessika Thomas in Port-au-Prince;
Additional reporting by Mica Rosenberg in New York; Writing by David
Alire Garcia; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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