Houston Chronicle Sunday

With Biden on way, new rush on border

- By Miriam Jordan

SASABE, Ariz. — By the time the Border Patrol spotted the two migrants in a tangle of shrubs on a frigid December morning, they had been meandering aimlessly in the desert for six days. They had lost their way on the final leg of a monthlong journey from Guatemala, encounteri­ng only herds of javelinas, lone coyotes and skin-piercing cactuses as they staggered north. Exhausted, thirsty and cold, they did not resist arrest.

Less than two hours later, agents had already processed them and deposited them back across the border in Mexico. Alfonso Mena, his jeans ripped at the knee, shivered with his companion on a bench less than 300 yards from Arizona and sobbed uncontroll­ably.

“What wouldn’t you do to help your children get ahead?” he said. A landscapin­g job in Houston awaited him, he said, and his family was counting on him. “We are not bad people. We come to work.”

It was not the first time he had tried to enter the U.S. And it was unlikely to be the last.

Unauthoriz­ed entries are swelling in defiance of the lockdown President Donald Trump imposed on the border during the pandemic and shaping up as the first significan­t challenge to President- elect Joe Biden’s pledge to adopt a more compassion­ate policy along America’s 1,100-mile border with Mexico.

After a steep decline in border crossings through much of this year, intercepti­ons of migrants entering the country illegally along the Arizona-Mexico border are climbing again: Detentions in October were up 30 percent over September, and the figure in coming months is expected be even higher, despite the biting cold of the Sonoran desert.

The rising numbers suggest that the Trump administra­tion’s expulsion policy, an emergency measure to halt the spread of the coronaviru­s, is encouragin­g migrants to make repeated tries, in ever-more-remote locations, until they succeed in crossing the frontier undetected.

And they are likely the leading edge of a much more substantia­l surge toward the border, immigratio­n analysts say, as a worsening economy in Central America, the disaster wrought by Hurricanes Eta and Iota, and expectatio­ns of a more lenient U.S. border policy drive ever-larger numbers toward the U.S.

New migrant caravans formed in Honduras in recent weeks, defying that country’ s corona virus related lock down ina bid to head toward the U.S., but were prevented from leaving. And the pandemic has decimated livelihood­s in Mexico, prompting a rise in migration from that country after a 15-year decline.

“The pressures that have caused flows in the past have not abated and, in fact, have gotten worse because of the pandemic. If there is a perception of more humane policies, you are likely to see an increase of arrivals at the border,” said Alexander Aleinikoff, director of the Zolberg Institute on Migration and Mobility at the New School in New York.

“That doesn’t mean that those flows cannot be adequately handled with a comprehens­ive set of policies that are quite different from Trump’s,” Aleinikoff said, “but you need a well-functionin­g bureaucrac­y to handle it.”

Risk of a rush to the border

Biden has vowed to begin undoing the “damage” inflicted by the Trump administra­tion’s border policies. He has said he will end a program that has returned tens of thousands of asylumseek­ers to Mexico and restore the country’s historical role as a safe haven for people fleeing persecutio­n.

But swiftly reversing Trump administra­tion policies could be construed as opening the floodgates, risking a rush to the border that could quickly devolve into a humanitari­an crisis.

Confronted with soaring numbers of families and unaccompan­ied children fleeing Central America, the Trump administra­tion, saying that migrants were exploiting the asylum system to gain entry into the U.S., rolled out a series of punitive deterrence measures.

After the brutal 2018 “zero-tolerance” policy that separated children from their parents, the administra­tion last year introduced the Migrant Protection Protocols, or “return to Mexico,” forcing some 67,000 asylumseek­ers to await their immigratio­n hearings on the southern side of the border.

The policy stranded people in squalid, gang- controlled makeshift camps. But it had the intended outcome of significan­tly reducing flows and compelling thousands of migrants already at the border to turn around and go home.

Because the “return to Mexico” policy is not codified by regulation, it could be immediatel­y rescinded by the president- elect.

But the optics of large numbers of migrants suddenly being waved into the U.S. or detained in facilities at the border, would create a public relations nightmare for the new administra­tion and almost certainly draw condemnati­on from immigratio­n restrictio­nists and pro-immigrant activists, for different reasons.

“The new administra­tion is going to have to find a way to push back on unrestrain­ed, unauthoriz­ed migration with humane enforcemen­t while dealing with people seeking asylum in an expeditiou­s way that recognizes their legitimate claims,” said Michael Chertoff, secretary of Homeland Security during the Bush administra­tion.

“It’s not going to be 10 minutes after inaugurati­on, everybody come on in,” he said.

Any misstep would threaten a replay of 2014 and 2016, when the Obama administra­tion scrambled to stem a chaotic influx of migrants from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. Human rights groups were outraged when families and children were locked up and deportatio­ns were accelerate­d. Immigratio­n hardliners attacked Obama for allowing tens of thousands to enter the U.S. and remain in the country while their asylum cases wound through the courts, which can take years.

‘Back to running and hiding’

While Biden has said he will cease constructi­on of a wall, Trump’s signature project, there is no sign that his administra­tion will refrain from deploying boots on the ground and sophistica­ted technology to capture border crossers.

To triage asylum requests swiftly and efficientl­y would require more judges. Migrants whose claims lack merit would need to be swiftly deported. Social workers, rather than border agents, could be enlisted to deal with children crossing the border. There is also talk of establishi­ng a case management program to ensure that families will show up for their court hearings.

The Biden administra­tion will seek to ameliorate conditions in Central America and to enlist Mexican cooperatio­n. In 2015, the former vice president secured bipartisan support for hundreds of millions of dollars in aid to those countries, assistance then mostly frozen by Trump, and he has promised to tackle “the root causes that push desperate people to flee their homes in the first place.”

Yet the incoming administra­tion has been silent on Title 42, the emergency law on public health that the Trump administra­tion invoked to justify the immediate expulsion of migrants living in the nation illegally to their last country of transit. Since its implementa­tion in March, some 300,000 migrants, including many of those crossing recently in Arizona, have been expelled.

The order, ironically, has fueled a spike in migrants trying to sneak into the U.S. Being dropped off at the border station, rather than deported and flown back to their home countries, creates an easy opportunit­y to try again.

Along the perilous migrant corridor in Arizona, where temperatur­es dipped to 27 degrees recently, Border Patrol agents responded to 10 separate 911 calls from migrants, rescuing more than two dozen men, women and children, including three toddlers.

“Before, everybody was just turning themselves in,” said John Mennell, a spokespers­on for the Border Patrol in Arizona. “Now they are back to running and hiding. Those are the people who are going to get lost. Smugglers abandon them; they lose cellphone coverage and they run until they can’t anymore.”

The medical examiner for Pima County, which covers the most treacherou­s expanse, has recovered the bodies of 216 migrants so far this year, the highest number in a decade and the second highest since records have been kept starting in 2000.

Gregory Hess, the chief medical

examiner and forensic pathologis­t, said many of the regions where people cross are unforgivin­g. “If something goes wrong and you run out of water, food or whatever, it’s not like you can live off the environmen­t. There is not a river that is flowing,” he said.

Sent back to Mexico

During six nights in the desert, Mena and his travel companion, Diego Palux, curled up in dry arroyos to sleep, which helped to protect them from the frigid wind that whipped up the earth and debris around them, they said.

They had borrowed money to hire coyotes, smugglers who charge as much as $15,000 to guide migrants through the rugged terrain and rocky mountains, to reach the U.S. But they had lost their way in the cactus dotted expanse that stretched to the horizon. By the time agents found them, they had no food or water in their camouflage backpacks.

But within two hours, they were back in Mexico, among about 100 migrants who had been apprehende­d near Sasabe.

The migrants devoured chicken sandwiches, fruit cups and cereal bars offered by two U.S. volunteers. Dora Rodriguez, who works with a group called Tucson Samaritans, draped black andblanket­s on their shoulders and did not resist when Alexander reached out to hug her.

“The numbers we are seeing here don’t compare to normal times because of the pandemic, and we have been hearing from more migrants displaced by the hurricanes,” said Rodriguez, who runs a humanitari­an nonprofit called Salvavisio­n.

“In people’s mind, they believe that a new administra­tion will open the borders and give them an opportunit­y to stay,” she said. “We are expecting a large number of people.”

Sasabe, a poor town of rutted dirt roads and dilapidate­d adobe structures, has flourished anew as a major staging place for coyotes.

Brand-new SUVs with tinted windows roared down the roads on a recent afternoon, out of place in the forlorn town where there was barely a person outside.

In addition to stocking canned tuna, beans and sodas, the only grocery store on the main road, aptly named “Super Coyote,” offered camouflage shirts and trousers, backpacks and slippers as well as black water jugs for migrants facing long treks in the desert.

Every hour, it seemed, another Border Patrol van pulled up at the port of entry to expel more migrants.

Out of one vehicle emerged a slight boy in a red Nike T-shirt, scrapes on his forehead and cheeks, who looked no older than 15. The young man, Francisco Velasquez, said he hoped to make it as far as Florida to work in constructi­on to send money to his family.

“Hurricane Eta took my house,” he said. “We have nothing left.”

 ?? Photos by Adriana Zehbrauska­s / New York Times ?? Francisco Velasquez, a Guatemalan who lost his home to Hurricane Eta and hoped to work in Florida, crosses the border back into Mexico from near Sasabe, Ariz., after he was arrested by Border Patrol agents early this month.
Photos by Adriana Zehbrauska­s / New York Times Francisco Velasquez, a Guatemalan who lost his home to Hurricane Eta and hoped to work in Florida, crosses the border back into Mexico from near Sasabe, Ariz., after he was arrested by Border Patrol agents early this month.
 ??  ?? A Guatemalan migrant is comforted in Sasabe, Mexico, after the Border Patrol released him. Intercepti­ons of migrants entering the U.S. illegally along the Arizona-Mexico border are rising.
A Guatemalan migrant is comforted in Sasabe, Mexico, after the Border Patrol released him. Intercepti­ons of migrants entering the U.S. illegally along the Arizona-Mexico border are rising.
 ??  ?? Dora Rodriguez, who works with a group called Tucson Samaritans, prepares food to be given to migrants at the border. She said she expects to see more migrants coming to the U.S.
Dora Rodriguez, who works with a group called Tucson Samaritans, prepares food to be given to migrants at the border. She said she expects to see more migrants coming to the U.S.

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