Los Angeles Times

Central American asylum-seeking families sent to Guatemala

- By Molly O’Toole

WASHINGTON — U.S. officials have started to send families seeking asylum to Guatemala, even if they are not from the Central American country and had sought protection in the United States, The Times has learned.

In July, the Trump administra­tion announced a new rule effectivel­y ending asylum at the southern U.S. border and requiring asylum seekers to claim protection elsewhere. Under the rule — which currently faces legal challenges — virtually any migrant who passes through another country before reaching the U.S. border and does not seek asylum there will be deemed ineligible for protection in the United States.

A few days later, the administra­tion reached an agreement with Guatemala to take asylum seekers arriving at the U.S. border who were not Guatemalan. Although Guatemala’s highest court initially said the country’s president couldn’t unilateral­ly enter into such an agreement, since late November, U.S. officials have forcibly returned individual­s to Guatemala under the deal.

At first, U.S. officials said they would return only single adults. But starting Tuesday, they began applying the policy to non-Guatemalan parents and children, according to communicat­ions obtained by The Times and several U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services officials.

One family of three from Honduras, as well as a separate Honduran parent and child, were served with notices on Tuesday that they’d soon be deported to Guatemala.

The Trump administra­tion has reached similar agreements with Guatemala’s Northern Triangle neighbors, El Salvador and Honduras, in each case obligating those countries to take people who reach the U.S. border after crossing their territory. Those agreements, however, have yet to be implemente­d.

The administra­tion describes the agreements as an “effort to share the distributi­on of hundreds of thousands of asylum claims.”

The deals — also referred to as “safe third country” agreements — “are formed between the United States and foreign countries where aliens removed to those countries would have access to a full and fair procedure for determinin­g a claim to asylum or equivalent temporary protection,” according to the federal notice.

Guatemala has virtually no asylum system of its own, but the Trump administra­tion and the Guatemalan government both said the returns would roll out slowly and selectivel­y.

The expansion of the policy to families could mean many more asylum seekers being forcibly removed to Guatemala.

Experts, advocates, the United Nations and Guatemalan officials say the country doesn’t have the capacity to handle any sizable influx, much less process potential protection claims.

Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services and Homeland Security officials did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

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