'We're waiting': Migrants throng U.S.-Mexico border in asylum limbo
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[December 22, 2022]
By Jose Luis Gonzalez and Daina Beth Solomon
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (Reuters) -Hundreds of migrants bundled in coats
and blankets formed a long line in cold winter air at the U.S.-Mexico
border on Wednesday, hoping the Christmas period will bring an end to
uncertainty over their hopes of securing asylum in the United States.
Many hoped entry would be easier after a Dec. 21 deadline for the United
States to lift COVID-era restrictions, but the U.S. Supreme Court this
week ruled to let the policy, called Title 42, temporarily stay in
place.
Watching migrants trickle past gates into the United States, several
Venezuelans lamented the last-minute move.
"We're waiting. Here they say one thing, then half an hour later they
say something else," said Venezuelan Vanessa Revenga, 40, one of
thousands of migrants to gather in recent weeks in the Mexican border
city of Ciudad Juarez, opposite El Paso, Texas.
Title 42 allows U.S. authorities to send migrants of certain
nationalities, including Venezuelans, back to Mexico without a chance to
seek asylum. The Biden administration has asked the Supreme Court to
leave it in place until after Dec. 27.
Christmas has made things even harder, said Venezuelan migrant Yessica
Jerales, who was with her two children.
"There's December 24th and you don't know where they're going to sleep,"
she said. "They see the lights and it's Christmas, and you have to
explain that where we're going is to give them a better future."
Migrants in other border cities face a similar quandary.
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Migrants queue near the border fence,
after crossing the Rio Bravo river, to turn themselves in to U.S.
Border Patrol agents and request asylum in El Paso, Texas, U.S., as
seen from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico December 21, 2022. REUTERS/Jose Luis
Gonzalez
Six weeks since he reached Matamoros, opposite Brownsville, Texas,
Venezuelan Giovanny Castellanos was gearing up to spend Christmas in
a tent away from his wife and five children.
Castellanos said on Wednesday that he saw 30 or 40 people cross the
Rio Bravo river to turn themselves in to U.S. agents. Reuters images
showed some migrants ferrying small children and belongings on
inflatable mattresses.
"Lots of people are desperate, lots of people don't want to spend
Christmas here," said Castellanos, 32.
Juan Antonio Sierra, who runs the city's largest migrant shelter,
says Matamoros now has up to 8,000 migrants, many of them living in
the border encampment or on the streets.
With temperatures forecast to chill further, he worries that those
anxious to reach the United States will risk their lives crossing
the river.
"It's dangerous because they can drown, because temperatures
fluctuate," he said, "and it's going to get even colder."
(Reporting by Jose Luis Gonzalez in Ciudad Juarez, Daniel Becerril
in Matamoros and Daina Beth Solomon in Mexico City; Editing by
Leslie Adler)
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