Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. migrant initiative struggles far from border

- GENEVIEVE GLATSKY AND ZOLAN KANNO-YOUNGS

As the Biden administra­tion struggles to tackle a humanitari­an and political crisis at America’s doorstep, it is focusing increasing­ly on keeping migrants far from the U.S.-Mexico border by establishi­ng migration processing centers in Central and South America.

But the program is off to a rocky start, with demand for appointmen­ts far outstrippi­ng supply, leading to periodic shutdowns of the online portal and some countries’ limiting applicants over concerns that the centers will cause migrants to overwhelm their own borders.

The centers, in Colombia, Costa Rica and others planned in Guatemala, have become a primary focus of the president’s migration strategy, U.S. officials said, and the administra­tion is already exploring expanding the program to other nations in the region, including opening a similar office in Mexico.

The program, known as the safe mobility initiative, is “the most ambitious plan I’ve seen,” said Sean Garcia, the deputy refugee coordinato­r for the U.S. Embassy in Colombia, who has worked on migration for more than a decade.

But even some officials involved in the initiative acknowledg­e that it is a modest response to an enormous challenge.

More people — 360,000 through the beginning of the month — have already crossed the Darien Gap this year than in all of last year. And in August, roughly 91,000 families at the U.S. southern border were arrested after crossing illegally, a monthly record.

“The effect on migration through the Darien will be minimal or none at all,” Francisco Coy, Colombia’s vice minister of foreign affairs, said about the U.S. program. “Let’s be frank.”

Since it was kicked off in June, the program has put about 3,600 migrants out of roughly 40,000 applicants on a path to be allowed into the United States, according to U.S. officials.

A spokespers­on for the National Security Council, Adrienne Watson, said it would “take time to build up the program to the scale we want to.”

“We’re ensuring services are being provided in an orderly and efficient manner, while also being able to improve processes,” she added.

Alex Diaz, his wife and 4-year-old son were about to board a boat in May to reach the Darien Gap, a brutal stretch of jungle connecting North and South America.

They had spent about $80 on tickets but quickly aborted their plans when they learned of a far safer option to try to make it to the United States: the new Biden administra­tion plan to open offices in several countries, including Colombia, where migrants, like the Diaz family, could apply for entry.

Once online applicatio­ns opened in June, Diaz, who is Venezuelan, quickly registered for an interview appointmen­t.

He has heard nothing since.

The program is meant to provide legal entry into the United States for qualified people seeking refugee status, family reunificat­ion or another temporary status known as parole. It does not provide asylum, which must usually be sought once inside the U.S. border or at a port of entry.

With migration one of President Joe Biden’s most vexing challenges and emerging as a potent issue in next year’s election, the administra­tion is essentiall­y offshoring the issue by relying on Central and South American countries to keep migrants from journeying northward.

Mexican authoritie­s had been intercepti­ng migrants crossing into Mexico from the south and preventing many from traveling to the U.S. border, though in recent weeks the flow of migrants heading north appears to be growing.

Colombia has accepted 2.5 million Venezuelan migrants in recent years and, with the help of U.S. aid, has provided residency permits, though many migrants have abandoned the country because of a lack of economic opportunit­y.

Following the expiration in the spring of a pandemic-era public health order that allowed the swift deportatio­n of most migrants, the Biden administra­tion introduced rules designed to restrict asylum at the border, while also expanding legal avenues for entry into the United States.

After a notable dip in border encounters, the numbers have started rising. Illegal border crossings have climbed to record levels during Biden’s tenure, part of an immense global movement of people driven by poverty, violence and political instabilit­y.

The online portal to schedule appointmen­ts in Colombia, which opened June 28, shut down after just one day. The portal was supposed to close after receiving 3,000 applicatio­ns, a State Department official said, but was flooded with more than 5,000 applicatio­ns in the first 12 hours. It opened again briefly in August and received another 5,000 applicatio­ns.

Two offices opened last month in Medellin and Cali, the country’s second- and third-largest cities. A third is set to open soon near Bogota.

A top concern for the United States and other countries during negotiatio­ns over the program was that the new offices would attract waves of migrants, according to Colombian and U.S. officials.

To deter mass movements, officials set strict rules. The offices do not accept walkins and are limited to certain nationalit­ies. The program in Costa Rica is open to Venezuelan­s and Nicaraguan­s who were in the country before June 12, while in Colombia it is reserved for Venezuelan­s, Haitians and Cubans who were in the country before June 11.

The Guatemalan government initially said it would accept applicants from Nicaragua, Honduras and El Salvador but has since restricted it only to Guatemalan­s.

“We will not allow any kind of massive or irregular flows or caravans,” Mario Bucaro, Guatemala’s minister for foreign affairs, said in a video interview distribute­d to journalist­s in June. “They are always moved by criminal groups that try to destabiliz­e the sovereignt­y of the countries.”

Some applicants, in addition to complainin­g about getting no follow-up when they registered for the program, said the requiremen­ts were unclear and that applicants in the three major cities where offices have opened, or will be, were contacted before people who had submitted applicatio­ns earlier.

U.S. officials said they were trying to reduce caseloads in large cities while figuring out how to reach applicants outside of them.

“We are committed to making sure that everybody gets a shot at this,” Garcia said.

While new programs involving multiple government­s are bound to experience hiccups, the safe mobility initiative needs to be better managed and be much bigger to be effective, migration experts said.

“They’re not providing what could be called an alternativ­e pathway; they’re providing an alternativ­e trickle — maybe,” said Adam Isacson, director of defense oversight for the Washington Office on Latin America.

Migrants are “going to tell everybody they know that this was a total waste of time” if they don’t receive quicker responses from program administra­tors, he said.

 ?? (The New York Times/Federico Rios) ?? Migrants near Acandi, Colombia, move through the Darien Gap, a narrow stretch of jungle terrain connecting Colombia and Panama, on Aug. 3.
(The New York Times/Federico Rios) Migrants near Acandi, Colombia, move through the Darien Gap, a narrow stretch of jungle terrain connecting Colombia and Panama, on Aug. 3.

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