Der Standard

Migrants Undeterred By Cruel Policies

- CHANG-MUY and ADAM GARNICK

In response to growing criticism that the state of immigrant detention centers at America’s southern border is inhumane, President Donald J. Trump tweeted a sweeping dictum meant to deter migration from Central America: “If Illegal Immigrants are unhappy with the conditions,” he wrote in July, “just tell them not to come.”

But the two of us have seen firsthand that merely telling potential asylum seekers of the terrors that may await them in the United States will not work.

This summer, we traveled across Honduras speaking about the asylum laws of the United States. We aimed not to influence decisions about fleeing but to inform potential asylum seekers of the legal obstacles they would face, and the rights to which they are entitled.

We asked attendees to raise a hand if they could name five protected grounds of asylum — race, religion, nationalit­y, political opinion or particular social group — or if they had heard of the new “remain in Mexico” policy. No one raised a hand.

We did not hide the harsh realities of the asylum process. We cautioned that asylum seekers might be separated from their families, forced to wait for months in crime-ridden border towns in Mexico, placed in “perreras” (literally, “dog pounds”) and detained without bail. Even if they are released inside America as they wait for their cases to be heard, life outside of detention can be exceedingl­y difficult.

If Mr. Trump’s proposal were effective, our audiences would have been discourage­d. They would have accepted that the costs of fleeing outweigh the benefits.

Instead, at the end of our presentati­ons, dozens of participan­ts discussed the sense of hopelessne­ss that pervades their country.

A firefighte­r told us he was considerin­g fleeing because of threats against his daughter’s life after declining a local gang’s offer to sell drugs. A businessma­n from a rural town explained his plan to flee the death threats he expected for failing to pay an extortion fee. A school administra­tor described the huge drop in enrollment after rival gangs recently battled over the surroundin­g territory.

On some days during our travels, we found that Hondurans were blocking the roads to protest privatizat­ion of education and medical services as well as the government’s rampant corruption. Only days after we left, the military opened fire at protesting university students.

When potential asylum seekers are faced with these kinds of horrors at home, simply communicat­ing with them about President Trump’s cruel policies are not a deterrent. Indeed, around the globe, past and present, this tactic has rarely worked: Pirates roaming the seas did not deter countless Vietnamese migrants fleeing the American war. And the European Union’s interdicti­on policies in the Mediterran­ean did not stop Syrians or North Africans from boarding rafts and journeying away from civil unrest at home.

The new bilateral agreement reached recently between the United States and Guatemala — under the threat of tariffs and a travel ban — that Guatemala will now be designated as a safe third country will do little to stem the flow of migration because Guatemala, like the rest of the “Northern Triangle” countries, is not safe. People will still leave.

In El Porvenir, in northern Honduras, one teacher spoke of her students’ “dream drawings.” A vast majority of her students, she said, drew pictures of themselves living in the United States as adults. “They know there’s no future in Honduras,” she said to us at a small town hall meeting.

As lawyers, we are not experts in foreign aid, internatio­nal developmen­t or foreign policy. But based on what we saw and heard, to actually deter migrants, America must go to the root of the problem. That would mean a recommitme­nt to support Honduras and the other Central American countries producing a vast majority of asylum seekers. In doing so, it cannot simply put money into the hands of a transparen­tly corrupt government that has failed the public and completely lost its trust.

The United States could instead back the many local civil society organizati­ons we met with that are doing exceptiona­l work in job training, education and community building. With extra aid aimed at reducing violence, strengthen­ing infrastruc­ture, getting desperatel­y needed medicines back into hospitals and books back into schools, more people will stay.

Many argue that the United States should be making these investment­s anyway, as amends for its interventi­ons in Central America, which added to the pain these nations are experienci­ng now.

With a long-term commitment, the United States can help ensure that the “dream drawings” of the Hondurans include drawings of themselves as presidents, doctors and firefighte­rs in their home country.

Hondurans still seek asylum, whatever the roadblocks.

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