Haitian migrants on the move weigh jobs in Mexico after clearout
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[September 25, 2021]
By Lizbeth Diaz
MONTERREY, Mexico (Reuters) - Many Haitians
who are heading for the U.S. border as thousands of their compatriots
were cleared out of a frontier camp are giving thought to finding work
in Mexico if measures to curb entry to the United States stay tough.
On Friday, the United States said a border camp between the cities of
Del Rio in Texas and Ciudad Acuna in Mexico had been emptied of
thousands of migrants, most of them Haitian. Some were flown out, while
others stay in the United States for now.
For weeks, Haitians have been fleeing economic, political and social
chaos in their Caribbean homeland, with many thousands still on the move
in Central America and Mexico, in the hope of a better life in the
United States.
Thousands have fanned out across northern Mexico in recent weeks,
spurring concern among officials that mass crossings such as those seen
in Ciudad Acuna could happen elsewhere.
In the city of Monterrey a few hundred kilometers to the southeast,
about 2,000 Haitians have gathered, tallies by migrant shelters show.
Marck Lender, a 30-year-old Haitian who had traveled from Chile, said he
would sit tight until he obtained the papers needed to legalize his
stay.
"I'm afraid of migration authorities, I don't want to be deported," he
said. "If I find work in Mexico, I'll be here."
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said nearly 30,000 migrants had
been encountered in Del Rio in the past two weeks and none were left in
the camp there by Friday.
More than 12,000 migrants will have a chance to make their case for
asylum before U.S. immigration judges, while an estimated 8,000
voluntarily returned to Mexico, and 2,000 were expelled to Haiti. Others
detained wait to learn their fate.
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Migrants seeking asylum in the U.S., who returned to Mexican side of
the border to avoid deportation, arrive to a new space to take
shelter which the National Institute of Immigration provided in
Ciudad Acuna, Mexico, September 24, 2021. REUTERS/Go Nakamura
Roberson, a 42-year-old Haitian solderer who had
traveled from Brazil, said he was fed up with paying money to
"guides" and had just submitted an application for asylum in Mexico.
"We've been really badly treated on the whole journey, and they've
charged us a lot to get here," he said.
Roberson, who said he had a wife and children in Haiti, declined to
give his full name. He said he wanted to get a job in Monterrey, or
in the border cities of Tijuana or Mexicali.
Thousands more Haitians are moving through Central America, with
others among an estimated 16,000 awaiting boats into the jungles of
the Darien Gap in Panama, an often dangerous bottleneck on the
journey north.
Underlining the dangers they face, Panamanian authorities said on
Friday they had found a skeleton and nine bodies of suspected
migrants who drowned or died from heat stroke alongside rivers in
Darien's region of Embera-Wounaan.
Haiti has been convulsed by natural disasters, gang violence and
chronic political turmoil that came to a head in July with the
assassination of its president, Jovenel Moise.
(Additional reporting by Elida Moreno in Panama City; Editing by
Dave Graham and Clarence Fernandez)
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