Uncertainty clouds US transition at Mexico border as new rules take
effect
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[May 13, 2023]
By Daina Beth Solomon and Julio-Cesar Chavez
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico/EL PASO, Texas (Reuters) -The Biden administration
began implementing a sweeping policy shift at the U.S.-Mexico border on
Friday as a COVID-era order that had allowed the swift expulsion of many
migrants expired and new asylum restrictions took effect amid confusion
and uncertainty.
Several last-minute court actions added to questions about how President
Joe Biden's reworked border strategy will play out, with advocates
filing a legal challenge to the new asylum regulation as it was enacted.
Facing concerns that the end of a three-year-old order - known as Title
42 - could further strain U.S. border facilities, cities and towns, U.S.
officials were keeping a close eye on the movements of migrants that had
already reached record numbers in recent days.
"We continue to encounter high levels of non-citizens at the border, but
we did not see a substantial increase overnight or an influx at
midnight," when Title 42 expired, U.S. Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) official Blas Nunez-Neto told reporters on Friday.
Seeking to discourage migrants from traveling to the border, the Mexican
government said its national migration institute has ordered its offices
not to issue immigration documents or other permits enabling travel
within the country, creating another obstacle for migrants.
Though a chaotic race to U.S. border ports of entry on Thursday appeared
to have given way to relative calm on Friday, there was a sense of
confusion among some migrants.
At the U.S. border fence dividing El Paso, Texas, from Mexico’s Ciudad
Juarez, hundreds of migrants who had slept there overnight formed a
single file line to be brought into the U.S. by authorities and put on
buses. Texas National Guard, state troopers and border agents patrolled
the area.
Immigration advocates represented by the American Civil Liberties Union
filed a legal challenge against the new asylum bars, claiming they
violate U.S. and international laws.
Advocates argue the new regulation, put in place by Biden's Democratic
administration to curb illegal crossings, resembles restrictions imposed
by his Republican predecessor, Donald Trump, that they had successfully
blocked in court.
U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas defended the Biden
regulation, saying it aims to encourage migrants to enter using legal
pathways. "It's going to be a tough transition," he told MSNBC.
U.S. asylum officers hurried to figure out the logistics of applying the
new asylum regulation.
Further complicating the new U.S. policy, a federal judge in Florida
ordered the U.S. Border Patrol not to release any migrants without first
issuing them formal notices to appear in immigration court. The Texas
attorney general later asked a federal judge to do the same.
SCRAMBLE AHEAD OF THE CHANGES
In chaotic scenes on Thursday, migrants scrambled to enter the country
before the new rule went into effect. The regulation presumes most
migrants are ineligible for asylum if they passed through other
countries without first seeking protection elsewhere, or if they failed
to use legal pathways for U.S. entry, which Biden has expanded.
Tens of thousands of migrants this week waded through rivers, climbed
walls and embankments onto U.S. territory.
In San Diego, a Colombian man, who was among asylum seekers taken to a
hotel for processing, said he and his wife crossed on foot and spent
four nights outside. He was granted an asylum hearing in 60 days and
paroled.
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Migrants hope to get their phones
charged by aid workers while they wait between the primary and
secondary border fences as the United States prepares to lift
COVID-19 era Title 42 restrictions that have blocked migrants at the
U.S.-Mexico border from seeking asylum since 2020, near San Diego,
California, May 11, 2023. REUTERS/Mike Blake
"We didn’t have anywhere else to go," said the man, who described
himself as a former Colombian air force member who had been
threatened by armed groups in his homeland.
Lindsay Toczylowski, director of Immigrant Defenders Law Center, one
of the groups suing the Biden administration, said the new asylum
policy was "extremely disappointing when people’s lives are in the
balance.”
Around 25,000 migrants were being held in U.S. Customs and Border
Protection facilities near the border on Friday, down slightly from
record highs earlier in the week, according to the National Border
Patrol Council, a union for agents. About 10,000 migrants per day
were reported crossing illegally this week.
A 17-year-old Honduran boy died after being found unconscious in a
Florida shelter on Wednesday, according to the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services. Unaccompanied children are exempt from
the new regulation, and advocates have warned that parents might
send children across the border alone.
COVID EMERGENCY ENDS, ASYLUM BAN BEGINS
Trump first implemented Title 42 in March 2020 as COVID swept the
globe. The order allowed American authorities to quickly expel
migrants to Mexico or other countries without a chance to request
asylum.
Some Democrats and immigration advocates say Biden's new regulation
is too harsh.
The measure also counters previous statements Biden made in 2020 on
the campaign trail, when he said it was "wrong" for people not to be
able to seek asylum on U.S. soil.
Biden, who campaigned on reversing Trump's policies and is now
running for re-election in 2024, kept the order in place.
Migrants have been expelled more than 2.7 million times under Title
42, although the total includes repeat crossers.
Mexico has generally only accepted certain nationalities - its own
citizens, migrants from northern Central America and more recently
migrants from Venezuela, Cuba, Haiti and Nicaragua. So, during the
same period, around 2.8 million migrants ineligible for expulsion
were allowed into the U.S. under a process known as Title 8 to
pursue immigration claims.
Republicans fault Biden for easing Trump's more restrictive
policies, while the Biden administration has blamed Republicans for
blocking legislation to reform the immigration system.
(Reporting by Julio-Cesar Chavez in El Paso, Texas; Daina Beth
Solomon in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico; Daniel Becerril in Matamoros,
Mexico; Dave Graham in Mexico City; and Ted Hesson in Washington;
Additional reporting by Evan Garcia in Brownsville, Texas; Lizbeth
Diaz in Mexico City; Kristina Cooke in San Francisco; Susan Heavey
in Washington; Dan Trotta in San Diego; Writing by Mica Rosenberg
and Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Kim Coghill, Chizu Nomiyama,
Jonathan Oatis, Aurora Ellis and Diane Craft)
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