U.S. begins returning migrants to Mexican border city under rebooted
Trump-era policy
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[January 06, 2022]
By Lizbeth Diaz
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - The United States
on Wednesday began returning migrants to the Mexican city of Tijuana in
an restart of a Trump-era program that forces asylum seekers to wait for
U.S. court hearings in Mexico, Mexican authorities and the U.N.
migration agency said.
The United States and Mexico last month agreed to relaunch the
controversial scheme known as Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), in
keeping with a U.S. federal court order.
U.S. President Joe Biden, a Democrat, has struggled to reverse many
hardline immigration policies put in place by his Republican
predecessor, Donald Trump.
Biden ended MPP soon after his inauguration in January as he sought to
pursue what he called a more humane approach to immigration. But a
federal judge ruled Biden's move did not follow proper procedure, and in
August ordered MPP reinstated.
The program first resumed in December at the international crossing
connecting El Paso, Texas, to Ciudad Juarez. More than 200 people have
been returned to Mexico so far under the relaunch of MPP, according to
the U.N.'s International Organization of Migration (OIM).
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A migrant boy, who returned to Mexico with his parents from the U.S.
under the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) to wait for their court
hearing for asylum seekers, plays at a migrant shelter run by the
federal government in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico September 26, 2019.
REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez/File Photo
Two migrants were returned to
Tijuana, across from California, on Wednesday with future
appointments in U.S. courts, an official with OIM told Reuters.
The migrant rights advocacy group Al Otro Lado told Reuters the two
men were Colombian nationals.
Neither U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) nor Mexico's
immigration agency immediately responded to requests for comment.
The United Nations' refugee agency and advocacy groups have
criticized the restart of the Trump-era policy, warning migrants
face the risk of kidnapping, rape, and extortion in dangerous
Mexican border towns.
Under the original 2019 program, some 70,000 migrants seeking asylum
were forced to wait weeks and sometimes years in Mexico for a U.S.
court date instead of being allowed to await their hearings in the
United States.
(Reporting by Lizbeth Diaz with additional reporting by Mica
Rosenberg, writing by Laura Gottesdiener; Editing by Marguerita
Choy)
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