‘We Are Not Equipped to Deal With This’: Migrant
Surge Overwhelms U.S. Border
Officials are struggling to contend with the chaos at
the U.S.-Mexico border as thousands of migrants arrive every day, trekking from
the farthest reaches of the globe.
Natalie
Kitroeff
By Natalie
Kitroeff
Reporting
from a migrant encampment near Sásabe, Arizona.
Dec. 27,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/27/world/americas/mexico-border-migration-arizona.html
After
fleeing war in Sudan, violent gangs in Central America or Mexican cartels, the
men had all crossed into the United States illegally, walked on foot over
rugged terrain for hours, and arrived at this outpost exhausted, hungry and
cold.
They wanted
to turn themselves into the authorities to ask for asylum, but were stranded
here, miles away from the closest town, Sásabe.
Then, as
temperatures dropped on Tuesday night, a convoy of Border Patrol agents rolled
in, loaded the men into a van to be processed and sped away — off to search for
more people in need of rescue.
“We are not
equipped to deal with this,” Scott Carmon, a Border Patrol watch commander,
said while surveying the muddy encampment. “It’s a humanitarian disaster.”
This is the
crisis unfolding at the southern border, as migrant encounters once again hit
record levels and test the capacity of American law enforcement to contain an
explosion of illegal crossings with far-reaching repercussions for the Biden
administration.
Thousands
of migrants are arriving at the border every day, trekking from the farthest
reaches of the globe, from Africa to Asia to South America, driven by
relentless violence, desperation and poverty.
In May, the
Biden administration briefly celebrated when crossings declined, even after
pandemic-era border restrictions were lifted and many feared the floodgates
would open. But the numbers have spiked in recent months, provoking sharp
criticism from both parties and fears within the administration that the issue
will damage Democrats’ electoral future.
Last week,
the number of apprehensions reached more than 10,000 a day — stretching the
resources of the Border Patrol and overwhelming small towns on both sides of
the border, where people have been funneled by smugglers consolidating new
routes to evade capture by the U.S. authorities.
“In terms
of migrants per day, December 2023 is bigger than any average we have ever
seen,” said Adam Isacson, a migration expert at the Washington Office on Latin
America. “Every official who is commenting on it, on all levels, says they’re
near or past the breaking point.”
The caravan
is unlikely to make it to the United States, experts said, but it has drawn
significant media attention to the tide of migrants who have already crossed
the border en masse.
Mexico has
been a stalwart enforcer of U.S. border restrictions, detaining a record number
of migrants this year, government figures show. But in December, the National
Migration Institute, a government agency, suspended migrant deportations from
the country because of a lack of funding, according to an institute official
who was not authorized to speak publicly.
Experts and
officials are still piecing together exactly what’s behind the recent migration
swell.
Among the
leading theories: larger numbers of Mexicans who seem to be fleeing cartel turf
battles across the country; rumors about the end of a key legal pathway that
may have prompted a rush to cross; and smugglers who have pushed desperate
people of all nationalities to try to enter at increasingly remote parts of the
border.
“If you
move to a place that’s super remote, there won’t be a lot of agents on staff
and that increases your chances of being released into the U.S.,” Mr. Isacson
said. “There is nowhere to put people. They can’t hold you.”
Izzeddin, a
32-year-old migrant from Sudan, was among about a dozen men from his homeland
at the Arizona encampment on Tuesday. He sipped sugary coffee provided by an
aid group, No More Deaths, that has helped keep migrants alive with blankets,
food and 911 calls to address life-threatening injuries.
“We came
here because we need protection,” said Izzeddin, who asked to be identified by
only his first name, fearing reprisals against his family.
A raging
civil war in Sudan has driven millions from their homes, including these men,
who said they lost family members and left loved ones in refugee camps to trek
to the United States.
In Sudan,
Izzeddin said, “we saw people being killed, raped.” He and his companions, he
said, were all waiting for one thing: “border patrol to come pick us up and
give us protection.”
Often,
migrants who get to the United States and ask for asylum — protection from
political or other persecution at home — do not actually get their claims
screened upon arrival. Because of the limited capacity to detain people at the
border, many are instead released with a court date for a judge to evaluate
their cases. The process can take years.
In Arizona,
border officials closed a key port of entry to legal crossings in early
December to focus on the unlawful ones.
Mr. Carmon,
the Border Patrol watch commander, pleaded for more resources. “Give us more
help, give us FEMA,” he said.
Last week,
workers from No More Deaths evacuated migrants caught in a rainstorm to a
nearby Border Patrol facility, a spokeswoman for the group said.
“If we had
a flooded city and people needed to get evacuated, they would drive National
Guard trucks, those big cattle trucks, and put our citizens in them,” Mr.
Carmon said. “Why they’re not down here helping us transport these people to
safety and warmth, I don’t know.”
For
Izzeddin, being exposed to the elements in the desert felt a lot safer than
staying in Sudan.
“It doesn’t
matter if it’s cold,” he said. “There is peace here.”
Hamed
Aleaziz and Emiliano Rodríguez Mega contributed reporting from Mexico City.
Natalie
Kitroeff is The Times’s bureau chief for Mexico, Central America and the
Caribbean. More about Natalie Kitroeff
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