Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

1st Mexico flight returns 70 Haitians home

- MARK STEVENSON

MEXICO CITY — Mexico began flying Haitian migrants back to their homeland Wednesday, sending 70 people to Port-au-Prince.

The first flight took off from the Villahermo­sa airport in the Gulf coast state of Tabasco with 41 men, 16 women and 13 children aboard. The United States also is returning migrants on flights to the Haitian capital.

Mexico’s National Immigratio­n Institute did not immediatel­y respond to questions about when more flights were planned. But it referred to those on Wednesday’s flight as “the first group,” suggesting it was the start of a process to handle thousands of Haitian migrants who streamed to the U.S. border this month.

Thousands more are stuck in the southern city of Tapachula, near the Guatemalan border, waiting to have their asylum or refugee claims processed by Mexican officials.

“Authoritie­s from the Interior and Foreign Relations Department­s agreed with representa­tives of the Republic of Haiti to start the assisted voluntary return of migrants in Mexico to their homeland,” the institute said in a statement.

The institute said the returns were voluntary, and that the Haitians had been living in Tabasco and central Mexico. That suggests they were not among those who had gone to the U.S. border this month, nor the thousands stuck in Tapachula.

A Mexican official said last week that the plan was to first remove Haitians who were already in detention centers and had not requested protected status.

On Friday, Mexico President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said, “We don’t want Mexico to be a migrant camp; we want the problem to be addressed fully.”

On Tuesday, Mexican officials opened a mammoth reception center outside a soccer stadium in Tapachula in a bid to ease a backlog in Mexico’s asylum system and the resulting frustratio­ns that drove thousands of applicants to head toward the U.S.

The site outside Tapachula’s Olympic Stadium can handle as many as 2,000 people daily. Previously, huge crowds had packed the streets around the commission’s downtown offices in Tapachula, jostling for position.

In early September, groups of hundreds of migrants set out walking from Tapachula, in many cases fed up with waiting for the overburden­ed asylum system to process their cases.

Each time, Mexican authoritie­s broke up the groups.

More recently, some 15,000 mostly Haitian migrants appeared at the Mexico-U.S. border. Some of them also had open asylum cases in Mexico but had grown tired of waiting. U.S. authoritie­s spent a week clearing that camp in Del Rio, Texas, deporting some directly to Haiti and releasing others into the U.S. with the expectatio­n they would appear before immigratio­n officials at a later date.

Some of those migrants who were detained by Mexican authoritie­s in Ciudad Acuna were shipped back south to Tapachula.

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