With barbed wire and warnings, migrants stopped at US-Mexico border
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[May 15, 2023]
By Daina Beth Solomon and Jose Luis Gonzalez
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (Reuters) - After hours of waiting on the U.S.
side of the border and hoping the Texas National Guard would let them
seek U.S. asylum, a group of 15 migrants crossed a shallow green river
back to Mexico, their faces drawn in disappointment.
After traveling from countries including the Dominican Republic and
Guatemala, they were among the first people on Saturday attempting to
enter the U.S. from Mexico after the end of COVID-19 restrictions that
had blocked many migrants from requesting asylum at the border for the
last three years.
But access to asylum is still restricted.
"Please, go back to Mexico," a Texas soldier told the group just north
of a river dividing El Paso, Texas, and Mexico's Ciudad Juarez, beneath
a bridge that joins the two countries.
As the migrants trudged up the sandy, trash-strewn riverbank into
Mexico, a Guatemalan man said the Texas troops had been clear: "It's not
in our interest to be here."
Two dozen National Guard troops quickly set about stretching coils of
barbed wire across the cement base of the bridge where the migrants had
been.
Under the order known as Title 42, U.S. authorities could quickly turn
back migrants without giving them a chance to seek asylum.
Since that policy ended on Thursday night, Reuters witnessed nine
instances in which U.S. authorities told asylum-seekers aiming to enter
from Ciudad Juarez - including Venezuelans, Cubans, Colombians and
Mexicans - that they needed appointments via a government app called CBP
One.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in recent years has grappled
with record crossings, and in the wake of Title 42's expiration has said
it is prioritizing migrants with appointments to streamline processing.
When a Colombian family of six approached a port of entry to El Paso,
Texas, a CBP officer said they needed an appointment.
"There are a lot of people ahead of you ... we can't have you jump the
line," he said.
'COULDN'T CROSS HERE'
Heidi Altman, policy director of the National Immigrant Justice Center,
a legal aid group, said she saw similar scenes at the Mexican border
town of Matamoros and was concerned that U.S. officials were blocking
asylum access.
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Migrants seeking asylum cross the Rio
Bravo river to return to Mexico from the United States, after
members of the Texas Army National Guard extend razor wire to
inhibit migrants from crossing, as seen from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico
May 13, 2023. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez
"Whether the person has a CBP One appointment ... does not make any
difference in terms of the U.S. government's lawful obligation to
permit them in and process for asylum," she said.
Beneath the Ciudad Juarez-El Paso bridge, a Texas National Guard
member warned migrants that if they came further into the U.S., they
would be deported and barred from applying for U.S. entry for five
years.
New 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.
Such messages have reached the ears of many migrants who are pinning
their hopes on CBP One. U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro
Mayorkas on Sunday said the number of migrants crossing the border
fell by half since the end of Title 42.
Yet some are unfamiliar with the app.
A Dominican couple under the bridge told Reuters they had just
reached Ciudad Juarez and had not heard of it. A Cuban woman, with
her sister and son at a port of entry said she did not trust the app
would work.
Kleisy, a 16-year-old from Guatemala traveling alone, arrived
minutes after the group had dispersed from under the bridge, and
said U.S. officials elsewhere on the border had delivered a similar
message.
"They said I couldn't cross here," she said, struggling to make
herself heard through a sudden stream of tears.
The teenager in black jeans and a bright yellow baseball hat left
her hometown of Jalapa alone and hoped to reunite with her father in
Dallas, Texas, after a 10-year separation.
Kleisy, who gave only her first name, crossed to the U.S. side of
the river, approached the nearest soldier and asked to cross. He
quickly waved her back, telling her to find a formal border point.
The Texas troops unspooled more barbed wire.
(Reporting by Daina Beth Solomon and Jose Luis Gonzalez in Ciudad
Juarez, Mexico; Editing by Stephen Eisenhammer and Matthew Lewis)
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