Slipping over Mexico border, migrants get the jump on U.S. court ruling
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[December 28, 2022]
By Jose Luis Gonzalez and Daina Beth Solomon
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (Reuters) - Even before the U.S. Supreme Court on
Tuesday opted to keep in place a measure aimed at deterring illegal
border crossings, hundreds of migrants in northern Mexico were taking
matters into their own hands to slip into the United States.
The contentious pandemic-era measure known as Title 42 had been due to
expire on Dec. 21, but last-minute legal stays pitched border policy
into limbo and made a growing number of migrants decide they had little
to lose by crossing anyway.
After spending days in chilly border cities, groups of migrants from
Venezuela and other countries targeted by Title 42 opted to make a run
for it rather than sit out the uncertainty of the legal tug-of-war
playing out in U.S. courts.
"We ran, and we hid, until we managed to make it," said Jhonatan, a
Venezuelan migrant who scrambled across the border from the Mexican city
of Ciudad Juarez into El Paso, Texas with his wife and five children,
aged 3 to 16, on Monday night.
Giving only his first name and speaking by phone, Jhonatan said he had
already spent several months in Mexico and had not wanted to enter the
United States illegally.
But the thought of failing after a journey that took his family through
the perilous jungles of Darien in Panama, up Central America and into
Mexico was more than he could bear.
"It would be the last straw to get here, and then they send us back to
Venezuela," he told Reuters.
On Tuesday, the U.S. Supreme Court granted a request by a group of
Republican state attorneys general to put on hold a judge's decision
invalidating Title 42. They had argued its removal would increase border
crossings.
The court said it would hear arguments on whether the states could
intervene to defend Title 42 during its February session. A ruling is
expected by the end of June.
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Migrants run to hide from the U.S.
Border Patrol and Texas State Troopers after crossing into the
United States from Mexico, in El Paso, Texas, U.S., December 23,
2022. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez
Reuters images showed migrants racing across a busy highway
alongside the border last week, one man barefoot and carrying a
small child - the kind of risky crossing that alarms migrant
advocates.
"We're talking about people who come to request asylum ... and
they're still crossing the border in very dangerous ways," said
Fernando Garcia, director of the Border Network for Human Rights.
John Martin, the deputy director at El Paso's Opportunity Center for
the Homeless, said the number of migrants his shelter has taken in
are increasingly people who crossed illegally, including many
Venezuelans.
"At one point, the majority were documented; now I'm seeing it
reverse," he said.
On Tuesday before the Supreme Court ruling, a Venezuelan migrant in
Ciudad Juarez who gave his name as Antonio said he was waiting to
see whether U.S. border surveillance would let up, hoping to make
money in the United States to send home.
"If they don't end Title 42," he said, "we're going to keep entering
illegally."
Elsewhere along the border, other migrants said they felt they had
run out of options.
"We don't have a future in Mexico," said Cesar, a Venezuelan migrant
in Tijuana who did not give his last name, explaining why he has
attempted once to creep past the border fence into the United
States, and plans to try again.
(Reporting by Daina Beth Solomon in Mexico City and Jose Luis
Gonzalez in Ciudad Juarez; Additional reporting by Lizbeth Diaz;
Editing by Dave Graham and Gerry Doyle)
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