Calm prevails at US-Mexico border after Title 42
migration restrictions lifted
Situation at the border stands in contrast to
Republican fear-mongering as Biden officials establish strict new policies
Victoria
Bekiempis and Maya Yang
Sat 13 May
2023 19.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/may/13/us-mexico-border-calm-situation-title-42-ending
The
US-Mexico border saw surprising calm one full day after pandemic-era
immigration restrictions known as Title 42 were lifted and replaced by new
Biden administration policies intending to block unlawful crossings while
establishing a legal means of entering the US, according to reports.
The seeming
quiet stands in stark contrast to fear-mongering promoted by many conservatives
including the Texas governor, Greg Abbott. The Republican politician accused
Biden of “laying down the welcome mat to people across the entire world” and
deployed “specially trained soldiers” to the border.
On the
border, it seemed like aspiring immigrants were waiting patiently for an
opportunity to enter the US. Many migrants in Mexico, across the river from El
Paso, Texas, kept an eye on their mobile phones hoping to receive an
appointment to request entry into the US, instead of crossing without
permission.
The US
Department of Homeland Security said officials have not seen any dramatic
increase in immigration, according to the Associated Press.
“I hope
it’s a little better and that the appointments are streamlined a little more,”
Yeremy Depablos, of Venezuela, reportedly said.
Depablos,
who is with seven cousins attempting to enter the US, has been in Ciudad Juárez
for a month. He said he did not want to cross the border unlawfully, concerned
about deportation. “We have to do it the legal way.”
Daniel
Mora, a reverend in El Paso, said several dozen migrants near the Sacred Heart
Catholic church and shelter listened to dictates on flyers distributed by US
immigration officials, which warned they had a “last chance” to seek
processing. They largely left, AP said.
The city’s
mayor, Oscar Leeser, said that 1,800 migrants submitted to immigration
authorities. Melissa López, who works as executive director for Diocesan
Migrant and Refugee Services at El Paso, remarked that many migrants were
willing to follow the new rules.
Speaking to
the Guardian from El Paso, Texas, Kennji Kizuka, the International Rescue
Committee’s director of asylum policy, said that it has been “remarkably quiet”
following Title 42’s expiration.
“It’s
really quiet. After midnight, we were waiting on the El Paso side and there was
hardly anyone who came to the port of entry. Along the border, there wasn’t a
rush of people trying to cross at other points,” he said.
“Title 42
has in some ways ended with a whimper and it’s not what I think many politicians
… [and] what a lot of the media expected … We’re also waiting to see what comes
next and hoping that it could be a more humane process,” he added.
The Title
42 restrictions expired just before midnight on Thursday. Some 10,000 people
entered the US from Mexico on Thursday, which is a “historically large number”,
the New York Times said. As of early Friday morning, US border authorities had
24,000 migrants in their custody, topping the maximum capacity of 18-20,000 in
custody, per the Times.
Title 42,
enacted by the Trump administration in March 2020, permitted border officials
to swiftly return asylum seekers across the US-Mexico border with the intention
of stopping the spread of Covid-19, according to AP.
Although
Title 42 kept many immigrants from pursuing asylum, there were no legal
consequences if they were expelled. Biden’s rules, in contrast, effectively
prohibit migrants from claiming asylum if they did not first seek it online, or
pursue protection in countries they traveled through en route to the US.
Asylum
seekers who are permitted entry into the US will also be subject to onerous
rules such as GPS monitoring and curfews; migrants who are thrown out can be
prohibited from coming into this country for five years and potentially face
criminal charges. The situation was not as calm in southern Mexico, however,
with migrants trying to hop on US-bound freight trains, AP reported.
Meanwhile,
in Ciudad Juárez, there was confusion among many migrants following the
expiration of Title 42 and the Biden administration’s new rules.
“We did see
… people from different countries approaching our team with questions, for
example, on how CBP One works,” Everardo Esquivel, the IRC’s senior
communications officer for Latin America, told the Guardian, referring to the
US Customs and Border Protection app.
“We met a
family from Ecuador on Wednesday and they had just arrived in the city a couple
of days before ... and they had been hearing different information on how to
use the app so they didn’t have much clarity. They didn’t know properly what
was going to happen after 11 May,” Esquivel said.
The new
rules have prompted extensive criticism from politicians and immigration
advocates. Republicans have seized on the policy change to slam Biden’s
approach to immigration in advance of the 2024 election.
Donald
Trump, the Republican presidential frontrunner who this week was found liable
for sexual abuse, was among the chorus of Republican critics. “You’re gonna
have tens of thousands of people pouring into our country,” Donald Trump said
of Title 42’s expiration during his CNN town hall.
Some
Democrats have also slammed Biden’s policies as too stringent. “It’s evident
that there’s been an unmistakable shift in the president’s immigration policy,”
Politico quoted the Illinois Democratic congressman Chuy Garcia as saying. “I
know that the administration is in a tough spot, but it’s beyond disappointing
to see them trying to appease Republicans on immigration.”

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