Stuck at Mexico border, anti-war Russians sweat their futures as
Ukrainians enter U.S
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[March 19, 2022]
By Daina Beth Solomon
TIJUANA, Mexico (Reuters) - Russians trying
to enter the United States at the Mexican border are frustrated they are
not getting in like Ukrainians are, despite leaving their homeland over
the invasion of Ukraine.
U.S. officials have let dozens of Ukrainians through this week but
Russians remain in limbo, prompting some to camp on the pavement
alongside a barbed wire border fence, defying warnings from Mexican
authorities to leave.
Irina Zolkina, a math teacher who left Moscow with her four children and
her daughter's boyfriend, burst into tears when a U.S. border agent on
Thursday took one look at her stack of Russian passports and shook his
head, saying they would have to wait - soon after officials ushered in
six Ukrainian men.
"There are so many years of fear that we're living in ... it's awful
inside Russia too," she told Reuters in the Mexican border city of
Tijuana opposite San Diego, California.
Zolkina showed Reuters a BBC video of her arrest for attending an
anti-war protest on Feb. 24, the day Russia invaded Ukraine in what the
Kremlin calls a "special military operation" that Western allies have
denounced.
She was released a few hours later and left Russia with her children the
following week, she said, passing through Tashkent and Istanbul before
reaching the Mexican beach resort of Cancun - a common jumping-off point
for Russians heading to the U.S. border.
Over 3 million Ukrainians have become refugees, according to the United
Nations, most of them in countries bordering Ukraine. Thousands of
Russians have also left their country, according to media reports.
Some Ukrainians crossing in Tijuana have been granted permission to stay
in the United States for a year.
When asked on Thursday about Ukrainians and Russians at the border, U.S.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said the government was
helping people fleeing Ukraine, and that other programs were being
considered to expand humanitarian aid.
The U.S.-Mexico border has been closed to most asylum seekers under a
coronavirus pandemic policy.
A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson, asked about current
policy towards Russians, said the agency makes exceptions to the order
on a case-by-case basis for "particularly vulnerable individuals."
'UNFAIR'
A couple of dozen other Russians have for several days wrapped
themselves in thick blankets to sleep feet from the border wall, hoping
U.S. officials will hear their pleas for protection.
"It's unfair that we can't get in," said Mark, 32, a restaurant manager
who came from Moscow with his wife, flying to Mexico via Turkey and
Germany in early March.
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A Russian couple embrace as they wait for a humanitarian visa at
the San Ysidro Port of Entry of the U.S.-Mexico border in Tijuana,
Mexico March 15, 2022. Picture taken March 15, 2022. REUTERS/Jorge
Duenes/File Photo
Both were arrested for three days
last year after protesting in support of jailed opposition leader
Alexei Navalny, said Mark, who asked to withhold his last name. He
said going back to Russia was not an option after new legislation
that imposes up to 15 years in jail for actions found to discredit
Russia's army.
"This is our decision to be here and wait on the floor," Mark said,
seated on a blanket while watching hundreds of tourists and U.S.
citizens enter San Diego. "If we leave this place, everyone will
forget about this problem immediately."
Between October 2021 and January, U.S. government data showed border
officials encountered about 6,400 Russians, some of whom said they
were dissidents and are now in the United States. The Russian
Embassy said in a statement then that it had contacted U.S.
authorities about those citizens.
In Tijuana last week, Mexican officials handed out flyers in Russian
listing nearby migrant shelters and a letter saying Russians can
request asylum but should not camp at the busy border.
Staying there ran "the risk of the United States deciding to close
the crossing for internal security reasons," said the letter signed
by Tijuana migration director Enrique Lucero.
Mexico's migration institute did not respond to a request for
comment.
For now, the Russians are staying put.
Mikhail Shliachkov, 35, seated on a cot under a parasol to take
cover from the glaring sun, said he resolved to go to Mexico with
his wife the day after the invasion, fearing he would be called up
to fight close relatives in Ukraine.
"I don't want to kill my brothers, you know?" he said, showing a
photo of his birth certificate that states his mother was born in
Ukraine.
As the Russians wait, U.S. border officials have also turned away
asylum seekers from Nigeria, Colombia, Honduras and Mexico, sparking
complaints of unfair treatment.
"There's an element of racism by U.S. authorities," said Kevin
Salgado, 19, a Mexican from the violent state of Michoacan, where he
said his father and 16-year-old brother, both members of a community
police, were killed.
"Why are they letting the Ukrainians pass? ... Can someone explain
to us?"
(Reporting by Daina Beth Solomon; additional reporting by Dave
Graham and Ted Hesson; editing by Grant McCool)
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