Imperial Valley Press

DHS: Pandemic measures cut illegal border crossings by half

- BY COLLEEN LONG AND MARIA VERZA

WASHINGTON — A Trump administra­tion official said Sunday that illegal border crossings have dropped by half as the strictest U.S.-Mexico border policies yet went into place amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, but there was confusion about how it was all working.

Anyone caught crossing the border illegally is to be immediatel­y returned back to Mexico or Canada, according to the new restrictio­ns based on an order from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention late Friday. According to Mark Morgan, the acting head of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the decision applies to all migrants.

“We’re not going to take you into our custody,” he said Saturday evening on Fox News. “We don’t know anything about you. You have no documents, we’re not going to take you into our facilities and expose you to CBP personnel and the American people as well as immigrants,” he said.

But Mexican officials have said they would only take people from Mexico and Central America and only those who are encountere­d straight away — not people already in custody. Officials later said the elderly and minors won’t be taken back and that they expected to take in about 100 per day.

“If people who are not Mexican or Central American are returned to us, Mexico would not accept them,” Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard said Friday in Spanish. “The United States will take care of that.”

The majority of people crossing the border are from Central America, but not all. For example, there were some 6,000 Brazilians and nearly 1,200 Chinese who arrived between January and February this year, according to Customs and Border Protection data.

But it’s not entirely clear what happens to those people. Morgan said the migrants should be “expeditiou­sly” returned to the country they came from.

CDC on Friday issued an order in effect for 30 days that bars anyone coming illegally in part because migrants are held in close quarters and there isn’t enough proper staffing or space to keep them at a safe distance and to screen for the illness. Plus, migrants who are suspected of having COVID- 19 are sent to local hospitals, possibly further infecting others, the CDC warned.

The borders remain open, according to Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf, but only to facilitate trade; the U.S. has about $3 billion per day with Canada and Mexico. Tourists and shoppers were asked to stay home.

Wolf said Sunday on Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures” that the number of migrants crossing illegally had plummeted, but it was important to “keep supply chains open,” but to do it in a careful and considerat­e way that would “limit the introducti­on and spread of the virus.”

Meanwhile, there was growing concern on the Mexican side of the border that the number of migrants stranded there would only increase, with shelters already at capacity.

“We have 300 people in the shelter and we can no longer take it. We have been a week without the United States asking for people and if they don’t ask, we are going to be overcrowde­d,” said Héctor Joaquín Silva, director of the Senda de Reynosa shelter, which borders

McAllen, Texas.

Silva said he hasn’t accepted more migrants and has kept the shelter in quarantine to avoid infections but that migrants continue to arrive in Reynosa.

Meanwhile, in the U.S., immigrant advocates filed a lawsuit in Washington D. C. requesting the immediate release of migrant families from detention facilities over concerns of inadequate care and an environmen­t ripe for an outbreak. They say the country’s three detention centers where families are held — Berks in Pennsylvan­ia, and Karnes and Dilley in Texas — have failed to take adequate measures to protect families from COVID-19.

 ?? PHOTO/EMILIO ESPEJEL
AP ?? In this Aug. 2, 2019, file photo, migrants return to Mexico as other migrants line up on their way to request asylum in the U.S., at the foot of the Puerta Mexico bridge in Matamoros, Mexico, that crosses into Brownsvill­e, Texas.
PHOTO/EMILIO ESPEJEL AP In this Aug. 2, 2019, file photo, migrants return to Mexico as other migrants line up on their way to request asylum in the U.S., at the foot of the Puerta Mexico bridge in Matamoros, Mexico, that crosses into Brownsvill­e, Texas.

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