Orlando Sentinel

Trump allies block path to asylum

Ecuador is closing its doors as one of the few countries left in the Americas to welcome African visitors.

- BY PETER ORSI, GONZALO SOLANO AND ELLIOT SPAGAT

TAPACHULA, Mexico — President Donald Trump isn’t the only world leader making it virtually impossible for many Africans to get asylum in the United States. He’s getting plenty of help from allies in the Americas.

Ecuador is closing its doors as one of the few countries in North and South America to welcome African visitors, depriving them of a starting point for their dangerous journeys north by land. If asylumseek­ers make it to Mexico, they face a virtual barricade near its southern border with Guatemala.

Trump’s allies are blocking a path for Africans fleeing violence in their homelands as those countries face a U.S. president who has used economic leverage to get help curtailing immigratio­n. Ecuador is pursuing a trade deal with Trump, while Mexico is trying to stay in his good graces after his threat to increase tariffs prompted its crackdown on illegal immigratio­n last year.

People from Cameroon, who are escaping bloodshed that has killed tens of thousands, often win asylum in the U.S. even more than other Africans, but they first must reach American soil. Most are English speakers fleeing torture inflicted by a French-speaking government at war with separatist­s.

Dozens of them are languishin­g in Tapachula, a Mexican city of about 300,000 people in a coffeeand banana-growing region along the Guatemalan border.

“I can’t go back to my country. I can’t go forward. I’m stuck. I don’t know what to do,” a 25-year-old Cameroonia­n said recently at a guesthouse where he’s staying and relies on handouts to eat.

The man spoke on condition of anonymity because he feared jeopardizi­ng his immigratio­n status in Mexico.

Trump has called asylum “a scam” and adopted several policies to reduce claims, including denying asylum to anyone who passes through another country on the way to the U.S. without seeking refuge there first. Border arrests plummeted 78% in January from a 13-year high in May.

While Ecuador’s 2008 constituti­on embraces “universal citizenshi­p” that allows almost anyone to visit, its government said in August that people from 11 countries need a visa to come, including from Cameroon and six other African nations. Twelve countries already faced visa restrictio­ns, half of them in Africa.

Jose Valencia, Ecuador’s foreign affairs minister, said the latest visa restrictio­ns followed a detailed study of migration trends.

“Universal citizenshi­p is a principle that is not open to debate and not questioned in the sense that it is valid, an aspiration,” he said in an interview published in El Universo newspaper. The challenge, he said, is “to avoid a regime of universal citizenshi­p that is so open we have to be subject to threats that can affect us and third countries.”

Ecuador’s crackdown comes as Trump dangles a trade deal. He said he was working on it when President Lenin Moreno became the first leader of the small South American nation to meet with a U.S. president in Washington in 17 years.

Trump drew a contrast between Moreno and his leftist predecesso­r.

“Ecuador had a very unusual outlook on life but, with your great president, he realizes how important it is to get along with the United States,” Trump told reporters of Moreno.

After the Oval Office meeting last month, the acting deputy U.S. Homeland Security secretary, Ken Cuccinelli, said on Twitter: “Hopefully we can all work together to reduce illegal immigratio­n out of Ecuador.”

Cameroonia­ns won U.S. asylum in 81% of cases in the 2019 fiscal year, compared with 29% for all nationalit­ies, according to court data analyzed by Syracuse University’s Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use. Ethiopians had a 77% success rate; Eritreans, 67% and Nigerians, 58%.

To seek asylum in the U.S., Africans fly to South America and travel north by land, on journeys where many get robbed or die from hunger and thirst. It’s faster than seeking refugee status, which has always been an extreme long shot with years of waiting — even more so now that Trump has dramatical­ly cut the number of refugees the U.S. will take.

Bolivia, which is much farther from the U.S. than Ecuador, is the only country in the Americas that accepts people from Cameroon and Eritrea without a visa, according to the Henley Passport Index.

People from Nigeria and the Congo are barred from all countries in the Americas without a visa.

English-speaking Cameroonia­ns recently began coming to the U.S., perceiving an ally in Trump, said Alexandra Lamarche, an Africa expert at advocacy group Refugees Internatio­nal. Last year, the U.S. scaled back military assistance to Cameroon, a longtime ally, and Trump eliminated some trade benefits over human rights violations, including extrajudic­ial killings, arbitrary detention and torture.

Cameroonia­ns also felt an affinity with the United States over a shared language, Lamarche said. Many have settled in the Washington, D.C., Dallas and Houston areas.

“Everyone had a connection,” Lamarche said.

More than 2,400 Cameroonia­ns visited Ecuador in 2019, more than three times the previous year, according to government records, including the 25-year-old man stuck in southern Mexico.

He fled Cameroon after being jailed twice on allegation­s of opposing the government, where he was beaten, forced to lay down in water and walk on his knees on a hard floor.

Being imprisoned in Cameroon “was a lot of stress,” the man said. “You don’t feel where they beat you. They kick you with a heavy boot. They smash my toes.”

Once in South America, he walked six days through the lawless jungle of the notorious Darien Gap between Colombia and Panama. He ran out of food and saw friends swept away by rushing rivers. He said assailants raped women, robbed him of $500 and stole watches and phones.

After three months of waiting for travel documents to leave southern Mexico for the U.S., he left without them in October and was jailed for two months after his bus was stopped at a government checkpoint.

Back in Tapachula, the largest Mexican city along the Guatemalan border, he slept on the streets and begged for money until a guesthouse owner allowed him to sleep on cushions on a hallway floor. For food, he relies on the charity of housemates, who sleep four to a room.

“I don’t know what I can do to leave this place,” he said. “They’re not giving me papers.”

Cameroonia­ns are desperate with nowhere to go, said Salva Lacruz of the Fray Matias de Cordova Human Rights Center in Tapachula.

Last summer, dozens of Cameroonia­ns arrived daily in Tijuana, putting their names on a list of people waiting to be processed for U.S. asylum. Now, hardly any reach the Mexican border city.

A hotel in Tijuana’s red light district rented about 15 rooms to Cameroonia­ns last summer — three in each one. By February, a desk clerk said Cameroonia­ns occupied only two rooms.

 ?? ELLIOT SPAGAT/AP 2019 ?? Cameroonia­ns wait in a rented apartment in Tijuana, Mexico, until their names are called to claim asylum in the U.S.
ELLIOT SPAGAT/AP 2019 Cameroonia­ns wait in a rented apartment in Tijuana, Mexico, until their names are called to claim asylum in the U.S.

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