Kuwait Times

US southern border global entry point for asylum seekers

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WASHINGTON: As political and racial persecutio­n grew worse in his native Mauritania, Barry looked for a way out. Scouring discussion groups on social media for tips on clandestin­e migration, he soon found that the longtime standby of risky sea voyages in leaky open boats to Europe wasn’t the only option. There was the United States — via Mexico.

The journey of Barry — who asked only to be identified by his first name — by land from Mexico in July reflects the growing reality of the southern US border becoming a global way station for asylum seekers, rather than only Latin American migrants.

Barry bypassed not only Europe but also the United States’ traditiona­lly immigrant-heavy coastal cities, making his way to the midwestern capital of Columbus, Ohio — home to a suddenly growing Mauritania­n diaspora. “I just want to get back my freedom of speech, my freedom of expression,” the

former NGO and government worker said, citing crackdowns last year on activists and protesters by authoritie­s in a West African country known for discrimina­tion against its black citizens.

As rich countries struggle to adjust to an era of mass migration, authoritie­s there often focus on lethal sea routes out of Africa to Europe and the long-standing flow north from impoverish­ed Latin American countries.

But of the nearly 2.5 million crossings recorded by Customs and Border Protection in fiscal year 2023, 1.26 million people originated from outside of the usual source-countries Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador. That represents a 234 percent increase from 2021, when some 378,000 “other” country nationals crossed the southern border.

For Africans specifical­ly, more than 58,000 crossings were recorded by the Border Patrol in 2023 — a 346 percent jump compared to the year before. About 15,000 of them were Mauritania­ns like Barry — more than the 13,000 Africans from the entire continent who had crossed the year before.

‘Quasi-legal’ routes

There isn’t one specific driver for the arrival of tens of thousands of people from as far away as China, India and Russia on the Mexican-US border. Much of the

migration is at least initially legal: Barry flew to Turkey first, then South America, before making his way north overland. The ever-evolving routes are widely shared on social media — and, according to US border officials, via “pseudo-legitimate travel agencies” in West Africa.

In November, the United States sanctioned a Mexican charter plane operator known to carry Cubans and Haitians to Nicaragua, whose lax visa policies mean people often enter there before heading overland toward the United States.

Efforts by Europe to block routes across the Sahara and the Mediterran­ean — including by funding the Libyan coast guard to intercept migrants at sea — might be pushing more people toward the United States, some experts say. “You’ve seen the way they patrol that area, and now individual­s are taking a different route,” says Dauda Sesay, national network director for the US nonprofit African Communitie­s Together.

Columbus, Ohio, has had a Mauritania­n community for two decades, but they were originally composed of refugees, like the family of Houleye Thiam, president of the Mauritania­n Network for Human Rights. She told AFP that the city’s Mauritania­n population has possibly doubled, from 4,000 to 7-8,000.

“You don’t really know they’re coming until they get here,” said the 42-year-old, who sometimes wakes up with 25 different voice messages on WhatsApp from people asking immigratio­n questions. Meanwhile, immigratio­n is increasing­ly roiling domestic US politics ahead of the November 2024 elections. —AFP

 ?? ?? EAGLE PASS: A group of migrants are processed by Border Patrol after crossing the river illegally near the highway on February 4, 2024 outside Eagle Pass, Texas. — AFP
EAGLE PASS: A group of migrants are processed by Border Patrol after crossing the river illegally near the highway on February 4, 2024 outside Eagle Pass, Texas. — AFP

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