The Sunday Guardian

Arizona monastery, motel turned into migrant shelters

- NICOLE NERI TUCSON, ARIZONA REUTERS

A motel and a monastery are among pop-up shelters that have opened in the last six months in Arizona to house a rising number of migrants from Central America entering the United States to seek asylum.

In January, Catholic Community Services (CCS) turned to the American Red Cross for cots and blankets to equip the former Benedictin­e monastery in Tucson, Arizona, as a shelter, said CCS Director of Operations Teresa Cavendish.

The monastery has housed more than 1,000 people since it was opened, Cavendish said.

“These are unpreceden­ted numbers for this time period and this region,” she said.

US Border Patrol officials told reporters on Tuesday that there has been a dramatic shift in how migration is happening along the Usmexico border, with large numbers of families and unaccompan­ied children from the northern triangle countries of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador replacing mostly single adult men from Mexico who typically crossed the border illegally in the past. Apprehensi­ons and people deemed inadmissib­le at ports of entry along the southwest border reached a record high of more than 76,000 in February, and the majority of those caught were families, according to US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) statistics. In recent years, applicatio­ns for asylum have ballooned as more Central Americans fleeing violence back home turn themselves into authoritie­s to seek protection, according to CBP data. The shelters in Arizona are way stations for migrants released by border agents that need a place to stay while they figure out where they can settle in the United States and pursue claims in immigratio­n court.

Cavendish allowed a Reuters photograph­er to visit the monastery and a 1970s motel in the Tucson area on condition the photograph­er not take pictures of the migrants’ faces or disclose their identities. Cavendish said the charity feared gangs and others in home countries and the United States might try to extort the migrants or their families if it were known they were in the United States. Facing an influx of families and legal limits on the time minors can be held, US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE) began to release large groups to Arizona charities and churches in October, ICE spokeswoma­n Yasmeen O’keefe said.

Adults are outfitted with a monitoring ankle bracelet on a case-by-case basis when they are held at ICE facilities in Arizona, according to ICE. Migrants are assigned an immigratio­n court near where they will live. They can wait years for their asylum hearing due to a backlog in cases, according to Reuters data.

Migrants stay at the shelters for a night or two to get a hot meal, a shower, a medical check up and maybe some legal advice. Volunteers help with travel plans, then drop the migrants off at the bus station or airport. They journey on to stay with friends or family in the United States while awaiting court hearings, according to CCS.

But their prospects for getting asylum are dim.

CBP Commission­er Kevin Mcaleenan said on Tuesday that while approximat­ely 80 percent of people asking for asylum pass initial screening at the border, only about 10 to 20% of Central Americans are found to have valid claims at the end of their immigratio­n court process. While many migrants fleeing Central America have said they left their home countries to escape poverty, violence and crime, hoping to find a better life in the United States, often those reasons do not meet the high legal bar required to avoid a deportatio­n order. The Trump administra­tion is concerned the asylum process is being abused, and has made efforts to curb the number of applicatio­ns. The Trump administra­tion recently announced that it was aiming to expand a program to send Central American asylum seekers to await US court dates in Mexico.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A motel, periodical­ly turned into a migrant shelter, stands in Tucson, Arizona, US, on 7 December 2018.
REUTERS A motel, periodical­ly turned into a migrant shelter, stands in Tucson, Arizona, US, on 7 December 2018.

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