The Jerusalem Post

Central American ‘caravan’ women, children enter US, defying Trump

- • By DELPHINE SCHRANK (Edgard Garrido/Reuters)

SAN YSIDRO PORT OF ENTRY, California (Reuters) – Eight women and children from a caravan of hundreds of Central American migrants have sought asylum in the United States after officials allowed them entry from Mexico, fueling hope among their companions who remain camped outside the border crossing.

Gathering people along the way, the caravan set off a month ago on a 3,200-km. trek across Mexico to the US border, drawing attention from the American media after President Donald Trump took to Twitter to demand such groups not be granted entry and urging for stronger immigratio­n laws.

His administra­tion’s hands are tied, however, by internatio­nal rules obliging the United States to accept asylum applicatio­ns. Most in the caravan said they were fleeing death threats, extortion and violence from powerful street gangs.

Dozens of members of the caravan slept in the open for a second cold desert night in the surroundin­gs of the busy San Ysidro port of entry, after pumping fists and cheering the news late on Monday that Customs and Border Patrol had opened the gate to eight women and children.

Those left behind said they would continue their sit-in until they were at least allowed to recount their stories to border officials and try to convince them that it was unsafe to go home. The caravan swelled to 1,500 people at one point but has since dwindled to a few hundred.

“We crossed the whole of Mexico,” said Angel Caceres, who said he fled Honduras with his five-year-old son after his brother and nephew were murdered and his mother beaten and raped. They would stay, he said, “until the last person is in, as MEMBERS OF a caravan of migrants from Central America pray near the San Ysidro checkpoint after the first fellow migrants entered US territory to seek asylum on Monday, at an improvised shelter in Tijuana. long as it takes.”

It was not clear when more of the group would be allowed to make their asylum bids. A Customs and Border Patrol spokeswoma­n said the port of entry was congested with other undocument­ed immigrants, and that the caravan members might have to wait in Mexico temporaril­y.

The majority of asylum claims by Central Americans are ultimately unsuccessf­ul, resulting in detention and deportatio­n. The Trump administra­tion says many claims are fake, aided by legal loopholes.

Vice President Mike Pence has accused the caravan’s organizers of convincing people to leave their homes to advance an “open borders” agenda.

Only two of the dozens of people in the caravan who spoke to Reuters over the past month said they were aware of the caravan’s existence before they left home. They said it had not played a role in their decision to flee appalling conditions.

Asylum-seekers must demonstrat­e a well-founded fear of persecutio­n at home, most often from a state entity. Central Americans fare badly in such claims because the state is rarely seen as directly responsibl­e for the life-threatenin­g situations they leave behind.

US border authoritie­s said in a statement over the weekend that some people associated with the caravan were caught trying to slip through the border fence.

Trump on Monday railed against a system that may see some of the caravan members freed in the United States until their cases are resolved, because a shortage of beds at detention centers and rules that limit how long women with children can be held.

“Catch and release is ridiculous. If they touch our property, if they touch our country, essentiall­y you catch them and you release them into our country. That’s not acceptable to anybody, so we need a change in the law,” he said.

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