Imperial Valley Press

Migrants quickly expelled by Trump try repeatedly to cross

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SAN DIEGO (AP) — Edgar Alexis Lopez looks well-rested in photos he took before crossing the border illegally in mountains east of San Diego, flashing a wide grin in clean jeans.

Six hours later, the 24-year-old Mexican constructi­on worker was out of water, exhausted after climbing over the border wall and convinced he would faint.

A rescue helicopter couldn’t land in the steep terrain but authoritie­s dropped water before border agents arrived and whisked him back to Tijuana, Mexico. Lopez quickly recovered and began planning his another attempt to reach San Diego, where he hoped to settle to earn a more steady living.

“You enter and leave, enter and leave, enter and leave,” Lopez said during a lunch break at his job in a Tijuana supermarke­t, where he’s saving money for a fourth attempt. “You have nothing to lose besides the physical strain.”

After a slew of profound changes by the Trump administra­tion to limit asylum, the coronaviru­s brought it to a halt. With immigratio­n laws largely suspended at the border since March, Mexicans and people from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador who enter the U.S. illegally are immediatel­y expelled to Mexico without even a piece of paper, generally within two hours and with no chance to plead for asylum — the post-Holocaust system to protect people around the world from torture and persecutio­n at home. Facing no consequenc­es, migrants are more determined to keep trying until they succeed.

The suspension of asylum combined with the introducti­on of “express deportatio­ns,” as migrants call them, accelerate­d a shift in who’s crossing the border illegally: more Mexican men coming for economic reasons and far fewer from Central America, Africa and elsewhere seeking asylum.

Dismantlin­g asylum may be the most significan­t way President Donald Trump has reshaped the immigratio­n system, which he has arguably done more to change than any U.S. president. He’s thrilled supporters with an “America first” message and infuriated critics who call his signature domestic issue insular, xenophobic and even racist.

Before the election, The Associated Press is examining some of Trump’s immigratio­n policies, including restrictio­ns on internatio­nal students, a retreat from America’s humanitari­an role and now a virtual shutdown of asylum.

Under the expulsions that began in March, 37% of those caught had been picked up in the previous year, up from 7% in the 2019 fiscal year. The annual figure hasn’t topped 14% since the Border Patrol began keeping track seven years ago.

Recidivism hit 48% among Mexican adults over a recent two-week period in the Border Patrol’s San Diego sector, said Chief Rodney Scott.

“They can get a night’s rest and try again,” he said in a recent interview.

To discourage repeat crossers, the administra­tion has been flying Mexican citizens farther into the country — to Mexico City and distant provincial capitals.

It is a throwback to the 1970s through 2000s, when Mexican men coming for jobs tried to evade agents. Asylum was almost an afterthoug­ht to policymake­rs until families — many from Central America — helped make the U.S. the world’s top destinatio­n for asylum-seekers in 2017. Many simply surrendere­d to agents.

“It’s a little bit more of the revolving door than it used to be,” Scott said.

Asylum is for people fleeing persecutio­n for their race, religion, nationalit­y, political beliefs or membership in a social group. It isn’t intended for people who migrate for economic reasons.

Trump has repeatedly called asylum “a scam,” largely undoing it before the pandemic.

“The single greatest threat to the integrity of U.S. borders is the tactic of lodging frivolous asylum claims for the sole purpose of gaining admission to the country,” Stephen Miller, a Trump senior adviser, told the AP.

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