Albuquerque Journal

Conflictin­g rulings put asylum rules on hold

Second court decision overrides the first one

- BY AMY TAXIN AND ASHRAF KHALIL

A federal judge on Wednesday blocked the Trump administra­tion from enforcing new asylum restrictio­ns for immigrants at the U.S.-Mexico border, marking the latest defeat for a president waging an all-out battle in the courts to stop the flow of migrants into the country.

The ruling by U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar in San Francisco came hours after a judge in Washington decided to let the rules stand. The California ruling halts the policy across the border as lawsuits play out in court.

The new asylum rules would prevent most migrants at the southern border from seeking asylum in the U.S. if they passed through another country first. Most of the immigrants crossing the border are from Central America, making most of them ineligible for asylum because they passed through Mexico.

It also would affect asylum seekers from Africa, Asia and South America who arrive regularly at the southern border.

The restrictio­ns went into effect last week, though there were conflictin­g reports on whether U.S. immigratio­n agencies were actually enforcing it.

Top U.S. officials say their plan would discourage migrants from leaving their countries, which they say is necessary to reduce the numbers of people that border agents are detaining.

Tigar, who was appointed by former President Barack Obama, has already barred less restrictiv­e asylum policies from taking effect and could permanentl­y block the new asylum policy.

The judge said the new policy could expose migrants to violence and abuse, deny their rights under internatio­nal law and return them to countries they were fleeing.

He acknowledg­ed that the country’s immigratio­n system is overwhelme­d by the surge in migrants from Central America over the last year.

“But shortcutti­ng the law, or weakening the boundary between Congress and the Executive, are not the solutions to these problems,” Tigar said.

The Justice and Homeland Security Department­s did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

President Donald Trump told reporters before his departure for a fundraiser in West Virginia that the Washington decision was a “tremendous ruling.”

The policy has exceptions that would still allow a migrant to apply for U.S. asylum: If someone has been trafficked, if an asylum seeker sought protection in a country but was denied or if the country the migrant passed through did not sign one of the major internatio­nal treaties that govern how refugees are managed — though most Western countries have signed them.

 ?? MARCO UGARTE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Customs and Border Protection officer checks the documents of migrants before they are taken to apply for asylum in the United States, on Internatio­nal Bridge 1 in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, on July 17.
MARCO UGARTE/ASSOCIATED PRESS A Customs and Border Protection officer checks the documents of migrants before they are taken to apply for asylum in the United States, on Internatio­nal Bridge 1 in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, on July 17.

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