Migrant shelter operators in Sonora, Mexico say theyβre preparing for the expected return of 700 Mexican nationals each day from U.S. Border Patrolβs Tucson sector, under the Biden administrationβs new executive order that dramatically restricts access to asylum.
βRepatriationsβ of migrants in Arizona to four Mexican border towns were expected to begin Tuesday night at midnight, according to a Tuesday memo from Mexican consulate officials obtained by the Arizona Daily Star. The memo came hours after the Biden administrationβs announcement of an executive order banning asylum requests for most border-crossers between ports of entry when the border is deemed overwhelmed.
The memo, written in Spanish, said the Border Patrol had just informed the consul general in Nogales, Arizona βthat they have received instructions from Washington to begin the βexpedited removalβ process through Nogales at midnight. β¦ They estimate more than 700 repatriations per day through this sector of the Border Patrol.β
Binational nonprofit Kino Border Initiativeβs migrant shelter in Nogales, Sonora, encountered four adults and two children who were subject to expedited removal from the U.S. on Wednesday morning, staff said, but it wasnβt clear if others had been returned overnight.
Migrants would face security risks if released after-hours in border towns, said Pedro De Velasco, director of education and advocacy for binational nonprofit Kino Border Initiative.
Humanitarian groups there βall agree that no repatriation, deportation or returns should happen during the night,β De Velasco said Wednesday. βShelters are closed, and people are just in a more vulnerable situation and at risk of being robbed, kidnapped or having to sleep on the streets.β
The memo from Mexican consulate officials β sent to a coalition of migrant shelters in Nogales, Sonora on Tuesday β said the expected 700 Mexican migrants returned daily under the executive order would be spread between four Sonoran border towns: Nogales, Naco, Agua Prieta and Sonoyta.
The Border Patrol plans to return vulnerable migrants, such as children and adolescents, through the Nogales port of entry, and others through the port closest to where they were detained, shelter directors in Nogales, Sonora said.
But consulate officials could not confirm whether migrant returns would take place overnight, which is concerning, De Velasco said. Itβs also not yet clear which, if any, other nationalities will also be returned to Mexico.
βInformation is what we need the most at this time, so that we can prepare,β he said.
Officials with U.S. Customs and Border Protection in D.C. did not respond to the Starβs efforts to confirm the details in the consulateβs memo. An Arizona-based spokesman said he couldnβt confirm or deny the memoβs contents.
De Velasco said Kinoβs migrant shelter in Nogales, Sonora is less than half-full now, due to lower migrant-arrival volumes in recent months, and theyβre well-prepared to help. But outside Nogales, Sonora, smaller border communities have less infrastructure to receive expelled migrants and offer support, he said.
βWe need the (Mexican) federal government, the state government and the municipal government to sit down with the NGOs (nongovernment organizations) so we can come up with a plan, because if we are not having this close communication and collaboration then yes β¦ it will overtake us,β he said.
Sonoran Gov. Alfonso Durazoβs office did not immediately respond to the Starβs requests for comment on Wednesday, nor did the office of Nogales Mayor Juan Francisco Gim Nogales.
Mexican consulate officials in Tucson and Nogales, Arizona said they didnβt have permission to comment publicly yet on the expedited removals.
De Velasco said Mexican authorities should advocate strongly for assurances of migrantsβ safety in discussing migrant removals with U.S. counterparts.
βMexican authorities should make sure to push whenever these discussions happen, but theyβre just folding their hands and accepting whatever the U.S. is mandating,β he said. βI can only see this getting worse once the volumes increase. β¦ It gives you a sense of how the relationship is right now: The U.S. dictates and Mexico accepts, without any pushback.β
More desert deaths likely, advocates say
Bidenβs new executive order bans asylum requests for most border-crossers once the Border Patrolβs migrant-apprehension rate reaches a seven-day average of 2,500 arrests between ports of entry border-wide.
The order was expected to go into effect right away, because apprehensions now exceed that level, experts said.
Asylum requests will only be processed again after average daily arrests fall to 1,500, a level last seen four years ago, during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Under Bidenβs executive order, border agents are no longer supposed to ask border-crossers if theyβre claiming fear and seeking asylum. Migrants who donβt affirmatively express fear, or an intention to request asylum, will face expedited removal, a possible five-year ban on re-entry and criminal prosecution.
Those who do express fear will face a higher standard in their credible-fear interviews with asylum officers, but could be eligible for other lesser protections than asylum.
Advocates say the expedited removals β not official deportations, which are ordered by an immigration judge β under Bidenβs executive order will return would-be asylum seekers to dangerous situations.
The order will also end up driving crossings between ports of entry by those who canβt access asylum at official ports, due to strict limits imposed by the Trump and Biden administrations, said Alba Jaramillo, co-executive director of the Immigration Law and Justice Network.
But instead of the recent trend of border-crossers surrendering to Border Patrol agents en masse, in order to request asylum β which is currently legal under U.S. law, despite Bidenβs executive order β more asylum seekers will now seek to evade detection, she said.
That will likely lead to a surge in migrant deaths in the Southern Arizona desert, as happened during the pandemic-era Title 42 policy that immediately expelled border-crossers to Mexico, without giving them the chance to request asylum, said Jaramillo, who provides legal counsel to asylum seekers at Casa de la Misericordia shelter in Nogales, Sonora.
A new analysis of the executive orderβs potential impact by immigration-rights group American Immigration Council said limited resources to carry out deportations, and the need for repatriation agreements with migrantsβ countries of origin, will rein in the intended effect of Bidenβs executive order.
βDiplomatic and resource constraints limit the governmentβs ability to execute its own plan,β it said. Due to too-few asylum officers to conduct credible-fear screenings, for migrants who do express fear, βrecent history indicates that the U.S. will be unable to put everyone through the new, more restrictive processes, and that a significant number of people will still be released into the United States pending court hearings β even though they may be deemed ineligible for asylum at those hearings.β
Asylum seekers are already turned away from ports of entry, if they donβt secure one of the limited appointments through the Biden administrationβs βCBP Oneβ smartphone application, Jaramillo said.
Those who use CBP One arenβt affected by Bidenβs executive order, but securing an appointment is already a difficult or impossible challenge for many, Jaramillo said.
βWe have asylum seekers at the shelter waiting nine months, trying daily to access an appointment and not being able to,β she said. βTheyβre in danger, they want to get through and so, many of them actually attempt to go through the desert. And now theyβre being criminalized.β
The American Civil Liberties Union has already vowed to sue the Biden administration for what ACLU attorneys call an βillegalβ restriction on access to asylum, similar to Trump administration policies that were ruled unlawful in federal courts.
But even if the policy is quickly struck down, migrants will suffer in the meantime, Jaramillo said.
βI suspect itβs not going to be a policy that is going to remain in place,β Jaramillo said, βbut the immediate consequences are going to be so great. β¦ Itβs going to create an even greater humanitarian crisis, that is being created by our own U.S. government, all in an effort to win political points with those that are more conservative. Itβs very shameful.β
Small communities may struggle
Shelters in Sonoraβs smaller communities, like Sonoyta, south of Lukeville, Arizona, that are expected to receive expelled migrants must tread carefully amid ongoing battles between splintered organized crime groups, Jaramillo said.
Jaramillo said sheβs been threatened by cartel members for her legal-aid work with migrants in Sonoyta, as have other humanitarian workers there. Efforts to help migrants access asylum through official channels is a threat to criminal groupsβ lucrative smuggling business, she said.
Two years ago she filed a complaint with Sonoyta authorities, after she learned of multiple women being raped in a migrant shelter there, which was βrun by a cartel,β she said.
The man leading the shelter threatened the migrants talking to her, and sent a message that βthey were watching me,β Jaramillo said. βSince then, Iβve been careful about being too visibleβ in Sonoyta.
Karla Betancour runs a migrant shelter in Sonoyta that can house 200 people, and currently only has 60 guests, she said. Theyβve been preparing to receive more migrants who might be returned under Bidenβs executive order, but more than 150 or so that would be problematic, she said in Spanish on Wednesday.
Betancour said her shelter receives families with children who havenβt eaten in four days, people who have been kidnapped and women who have been raped in their journey through Mexico. For them to be turned away after crossing the U.S. border, believing theyβve finally made it to safety, would be devastating, she said.
βTo go through all that and not be able to complete their mission, I feel itβs something very unjust, truly,β she said.
In Agua Prieta, across the border from Douglas, Arizona, aid workers are ready to help people expelled from the U.S., said Mark Adams, of binational faith-based aid group Frontera de Cristo, which partners with the Migrant Resource Center in Agua Prieta.
Since January, the center has tallied more than 1,200 migrants expelled from the U.S. through βvoluntary returnsβ or other removal mechanisms. Adams emphasized increases in shelter guests are never a burden.
βItβs an opportunity to provide a sense of safety, dignity and security to folks who are in very vulnerable situations,β Adams said. βI think for many of us in the communities of faith and communities of conscience, itβs concerning that vulnerable populations would be seen as burdens because that then places them as a cause of a problem, when theyβre actually the folks who are suffering from systematic problems that arenβt providing opportunities for the most vulnerable in society.β
Previously asylum seekers also had the option to wait in line outside certain ports of entry, like the DeConcini port in Nogales. Some even camp overnight for weeks, waiting for a chance at one of the few daily walk-up appointments available.
But now, under Bidenβs executive order, that is no longer an option, De Velasco said.
βIt basically means that right now, the only way migrants have to access asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border is through the CBP One app,β he said.
Organized crime groups thrive when safer routes to immigrate or request asylum are cut off, Jaramillo said. Even before the executive order, when buses arrive in northern Mexico to drop off migrants expelled from the U.S., smugglers are waiting for them, she said.
βThey approach them immediately, the minute theyβre left on the Mexican border,β she said. βNow itβs just going to give so much power to the cartels β greater kidnappings, greater harm, greater economic power.β
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