Trump
Vowed a Crackdown on the Mexican Border, but It’s Already Quiet
Ahead of the
inauguration, migrant shelters south of the Rio Grande are far from full, a
reflection of the tougher measures imposed on both sides of the border.
By James
Wagner and Simon RomeroPhotographs by César Rodríguez
James Wagner
reported from Ciudad Juárez, and Simon Romero from Mexico City.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/18/world/americas/migrants-trump-inauguration-border.html
Jan. 18,
2025
Migrants
used to gather by the hundreds in encampments in Ciudad Juárez, on the Mexican
side of the Rio Grande, waiting for a chance to cross into the United States.
But as President-elect Donald J. Trump prepares to take office on Monday, few
people could be found this past week on the once-teeming embankments.
All that
remained were extinguished campfires, discarded shoes, shirts and toothbrushes.
One Mexican
city after another has reported a similar situation along the border with the
United States, where the number of migrants has steadily dropped in recent
months. The decline has been attributed largely to hardened restrictions
introduced by the Biden administration and by Mexican and Panamanian officials
meant to deter migration.
As President
Biden came under increasing pressure during his re-election campaign to curb
migration flows, he issued in June an executive order effectively blocking
undocumented migrants from receiving asylum. That month, U.S. border officials
recorded 83,532 illegal crossings, a significant drop from the previous month’s
117,905.
Despite the
decline, illegal crossings remain higher than during much of Mr. Trump’s first
term, fueling calls by the new Trump administration, and even by some Democrats
in Congress, for more severe restrictions on migration to the United States.
Gov. Kristi
Noem of South Dakota, Mr. Trump’s pick to run the Homeland Security Department,
told senators on Friday that she planned to reinstate a Trump-era policy
forcing asylum seekers to stay in Mexico for the duration of their U.S. cases
and reduce temporary immigration relief for people from countries experiencing
unrest.
“Border
security must remain a top priority,” Ms. Noem said.
Some
officials in Latin America are pushing back, arguing that the tougher
restrictions on both sides of the border have worked to stem the crisis.
“The flow of
migration from the south of Mexico toward the border has diminished in the last
few months,” said Enrique Serrano Escobar, who leads the Chihuahua State office
responsible for receiving migrants. “There is no crisis,” he said of Ciudad
Juárez. “There is no problem.”
The quieter
border these days contrasts with the recent years of frequent tragedies along
the frontier, including family separations and the 2023 fire at a migrant
detention facility in Ciudad Juárez that killed dozens.
Thousands of
migrants are still trying to make their way north even as the authorities on
both sides of the border harden restrictions. But overall, movement through the
Darién Gap, the inhospitable land bridge connecting North and South America,
and shelter capacity in U.S.-Mexico border cities like Ciudad Juárez and
Matamoros have become indicators of how migration flows are easing.
“Normally,
we would have around 150,” said Lucio Torres, who has been overseeing a shelter
in Nuevo Laredo, across the Rio Grande, for three years. The shelter has
capacity for 300 people. This week, the facility housed only seven.
Mr. Serrano
Escobar said that migrant shelters run by government and civic organizations in
Ciudad Juárez, with capacity for about 3,000 migrants, are currently only about
40 percent full. “The city is calm,” he added.
In November,
more than 46,000 people crossed the border illegally, the lowest number during
the Biden administration. December saw more than 47,000 illegal crossings. By
comparison, in December 2023, illegal crossings surpassed a record of roughly
250,000.
Mexican
security forces said that they detained more than 475,000 migrants in the last
quarter of 2024. That is nearly 68 percent more detentions compared with the
same period a year earlier, according to government data.
Solsiree
Petit, 44, a Venezuelan teacher in Ciudad Juárez, said she had tumors in her
breasts that require surgery. She said her sons, 10 and 17, had turned
themselves in to the U.S. authorities seeking asylum about a week ago. She said
she had an appointment with U.S. Customs and Border Protection in El Paso to
submit her own asylum application on Jan. 29.
She said she
hoped that her appointment would still be honored under the Trump
administration. “I prefer not to think otherwise about that,” she said,
“because it depresses you more.”
CBP One, the
phone app that Ms. Petit used to schedule her appointment, allowed U.S.
immigration authorities to process nearly 44,000 migrants in December at ports
of entry.
While the
Biden administration created the app to incentivize migrants to avoid crossing
into the country illegally, Ms. Noem, the Homeland Security nominee, said she
would wind down use of the app, reflecting concerns among Republicans that it
was used to allow migrants into the country who should be barred from entry.
Similar to
the tense calm seen in Ciudad Juárez, the Pumarejo shelter in Matamoros, which
can accommodate 1,500 people, currently has only 260, according to shelter
officials. In Tijuana, three notable shelters indicated that they were only 50
percent full.
Shelters in
Guatemala City have also all but emptied of migrants heading north, said Karina
López, a social worker at the city’s Casa del Migrante shelter. Several years
ago, the shelter struggled to care for more than 3,000 weary migrants with just
over 100 beds. Those numbers are unheard-of today, Ms. López said. That is
partly because people are staying only a few hours in their rush to get to the
border before the inauguration, she said.
Fear of
violent crime and extortion is also thought to be keeping some migrants away
from shelters targeted by organized crime in Mexico. Instead of seeking refuge
there, some are choosing to stay with acquaintances, in rented rooms or with
their smugglers as they try to make their way to the border, legally or
illegally.
“I don’t
care if the devil himself is in my way, I’m going forward,” said Juan
Hernández, a handyman from Honduras. Mr. Hernández, 45, said he had lived in
the United States for 23 years and had been deported five times. He arrived six
months ago in Monterrey, a major industrial hub in northeast Mexico, after
being deported to Honduras following a conviction in North Carolina for drunken
driving.
He said he
planned to cross the border again soon in a bid to reunite with his two
children living in Raleigh, N.C.
For now,
migrants like Mr. Hernández appear to be a minority. Not long ago in the
historic center of Guatemala City, the sidewalks were filled with people
begging for spare change or a meal for their children, many of them draped in
the Venezuelan flag. This week, they were mostly absent.
In the
Darién Gap, the number of migrants fell sharply after the Panamanian government
introduced tougher restrictions to complement the Biden administration’s new
asylum policies.
Two years
ago, boatloads of people trying to get to the jungle would leave every day from
Necoclí, a Colombian beach town at the southern end of the jungle. Migrants
would often photograph the boat journeys and share pictures on social media,
where they came to symbolize the migrants’ last moments of safety before
entering the perilous Darién Gap jungle.
Now, days go
by when there are not enough migrants to fill a single boat. Instead, the boats
are leaving every two or three days and not always full.
In August
2023, a record 80,000 migrants passed through the Darién in a single month. In
December, just under 5,000 people went through, according to Panamanian
officials.
Yet, as the
Trump inauguration approaches, smugglers have continued to urge migrants to get
to the border and avoid a potential crackdown. Fearing it could be their last
chance to make their way to the United States, some have resorted to begging
friends to loan them money or to turning over the deeds to their homes to
smugglers as collateral, shelter operators say.
One option
offered by smugglers and referred to by migrants as the “V.I.P. route” shuttles
migrants from Guatemala to Cancún, Mexico, by land, and from Cancún to Ciudad
Juárez by air using false Mexican passports, according to Ms. López, the social
worker. The price of a one-way flight on this route peaked at around $450 this
week.
After the
inauguration, the price drops to about $100.
Reporting
was contributed by Annie Correal from Guatemala City; Julie Turkewitz from
Bogotá, Colombia; Chantal Flores from Monterrey, Mexico; Edyra Espriella from
Matamoros, Mexico; Aline Corpus from Tijuana, Mexico; and Emiliano Rodríguez
Mega and Rocío Gallegos from Mexico City.
James Wagner
covers Latin America, including sports, and is based in Mexico City. A
Nicaraguan American from the Washington area, he is a native Spanish speaker.
More about James Wagner
Simon Romero
is a Times correspondent covering Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean. He
is based in Mexico City. More about Simon Romero
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