Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

After lull, number of migrants trying to enter the U.S. soars

- By Kirk Semple

NOGALES, Mexico — Illegal migration along the southwest border of the United States has surged after a period of stagnation, as economic hardship, made worse by the pandemic, has driven thousands northward seeking work.

After plunging in the spring, when nations went into lockdown and shut down borders in an effort to curb the spread of the virus, the number of migrants arrested along the United States border with Mexico more than doubled between April and July, according to the U.S. government.

As the numbers rise, immigratio­n is becoming once again a primary rallying cry for President Donald Trump, who is trailing in the polls in his bid for re-election and looking for purchase with an electorate that is increasing­ly unhappy with his handling of the pandemic and the economy.

“Despite the dangers posed by COVID-19, illegal immigratio­n — it continues,” Mark Morgan, the acting commission­er of Customs and Border Protection, said on Thursday.

Undocument­ed migrants were “putting American lives at risk,” he added, although the United States leads the world in the number of deaths from the coronaviru­s.

Mr. Morgan touted the necessity of continuing to build the border wall, a project central to Mr. Trump’s political identity, to forestall illegal migration and the further spread of the coronaviru­s by infected undocument­ed immigrants.

The numbers are still far below the peak of the migration crisis in 2019, and also far lower than the record highs set in the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s, when annual tallies of migrants apprehende­d at the southwest border often topped 1 million.

And while undocument­ed migration is rebounding from a brief lull, who is coming — and why — has changed significan­tly since the pandemic. Many say they have been inspired to try to migrate now because of a new Trump administra­tion policy that returns them to Mexico quickly, often within hours of being captured, but has the unintended effect of giving them more chances to cross the border illegally.

During the past several years, Central Americans dominated the flow of migrants trying to cross the southwest border, with many seeking asylum. They often traveled as families, frequently with children, and peacefully surrendere­d to American border agents in the hope of getting a chance to apply for sanctuary.

Now, many Central Americans who might otherwise have sought to migrate have been discourage­d from leaving home by closed borders and other pandemic-related travel restrictio­ns, migrants’ advocates said. And word has gotten back to potential refugees fleeing persecutio­n that under the Trump administra­tion’s restrictiv­e immigratio­n policies, there is little chance now of securing asylum in the United States.

Instead, the vast majority of those caught trying to cross into the United States in recent months are Mexican, officials and migrants’ advocates said. And their encounters with the authoritie­s were often chaotic, with migrants scattering into the desert to evade capture.

“They’re running; they’re fighting,” Mr. Morgan said. “They absolutely have no appreciati­on for the deadly consequenc­es of their actions while we’re navigating a global, deadly pandemic.”

Mexico has been among the countries worst affected by the coronaviru­s pandemic, with nearly 49,000 reported dead — behind only much larger Brazil and the

United States. The real number of lives lost is believed to be much higher because of a dearth of testing and a significan­t undercount of cases.

Millions lost their jobs amid a mounting recession that economists expect to be the deepest in nearly a century, but the government has eschewed the stimulus measures that other nations used to prop up economies as they buckled under the weight of the pandemic.

In July, 78% of those apprehende­d on the southweste­rn border were from Mexico, mainly single adult men, Mr. Morgan said.

The number of migrants detained along the border with Mexico jumped to 38,347 in July from 16,162 in April, a 137% increase, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

That is still a far cry from last year, when there were more than 99,000 apprehensi­ons in April 2019 and nearly 133,000 that May. But the steep rise in recent months reflects a resurgence of the migratory stream.

While migrants and their advocates say that job losses and deepening poverty have been principal drivers of the recent increase from Mexico, a recent Trump administra­tion border policy has also been inspiring migrants to try their luck now.

In March, the administra­tion issued an order that allowed American immigratio­n agents to suspend normal procedures and swiftly expel illegal border crossers, often in a matter of hours, citing the public health need to keep detention centers as empty as possible and prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s. The new policy also extended to refugees seeking asylum.

For about 91% of those arrests in July, the administra­tion used the special rule to rapidly return a migrant to Mexico.

Numerous migrants interviewe­d in this border city in recent days said the policy had been an incentive for them: If they failed in their bid to enter the United States, they said, they would be spared the hardship of detention and would be quickly sent back to Mexico, putting them in position to try again.

“What’s encouragin­g us now is that because of the pandemic, they are letting us go quickly,” said Jacobo, 27, a carpenter from the Mexican port city of Veracruz who tried, unsuccessf­ully, to cross the border at Nogales late last month.

He requested partial anonymity to avoid drawing attention from the American and Mexican authoritie­s.

Migrants say that along this stretch of the border, it is easy to find a smuggler to show you the way across. Most crossings occur outside the cities and towns, in remote areas where the towering metal border barrier gives way to low wire fencing, in some places, or nothing at all.

But it is also a fiercely unforgivin­g environmen­t: Migration routes wend through a vast wilderness desert region in southern Arizona that puts migrants at great risk of dehydratio­n, heatstroke and starvation. Thousands have died in recent decades trying to cross.

Jacobo, who decided to migrate after the pandemic cost him his job at a constructi­on firm, tried to cross one night late last month in the company of four other migrants, guided by a smuggler who communicat­ed with them by cellphone.

He had already paid about $450 to the criminal group that controlled the smuggling routes along that stretch of the border, and promised to pay another $6,700 to the smuggler if he successful­ly made it into the interior of the United States.

Somewhere outside the small Mexican border town of Sasabe, Jacobo and the four others crawled under a low wire fence that demarcated the border. For two days, they trudged north across the Arizona desert, moving at night and during the cooler morning hours.

Late on the second night, they were intercepte­d by American border agents. The migrants fled. But over the next five hours they were rounded up, then marched to Nogales and handed over to Mexican immigratio­n officials, who processed and released them.

That evening, Jacobo rested at the San Juan Bosco migrant shelter in Nogales and waited for his brother, an undocument­ed immigrant living in the United

States, to send him money for another attempt. He was going to keep trying until he was successful, he said; giving up would be foolish.

“The possibilit­ies of entering are good,” he said, adding that the quick processing at the border was “in our favor.”

The shelter’s population reflected the recent shifts in the migratory flow. Last year, during the peak of the migration crisis, as many as 200 migrants slept there a night, most hoping to present themselves at the border and apply for asylum, said Gilda Irene Esquer Felix, who runs the shelter.

But since the Trump administra­tion had effectivel­y suspended access to the asylum program, nearly all of those migrants who had been waiting for an opportunit­y to cross had left the shelter, returning to their home countries, melting into Mexican society or trying to find an illegal route across the border.

In recent months, only a handful of migrants has been showing up at the shelter each day, Ms. Esquer said.

Two Mexican women traveling together were among about a dozen residents there one recent night. They had met during a failed crossing several weeks ago and had since tried three other times, to no avail.

“Various friends have been successful,” lamented Dinora, 24, who allowed publicatio­n of only her first name. She had been compelled to migrate, she said, after she lost her job as a seamstress in a factory in her home state of Campeche on the Gulf of Mexico.

She had heard that the Americans were not detaining people, making it much easier to try again. But after four failed crossings, and the duress of trying to cross the desert, she decided to head back home.

“No more,” she said. Her friend, however, was determined to try again.

 ?? Adriana Zehbrauska­s/The New York Times ?? The Mexico side of the U.S. border wall in Nogales, Mexico. The number of immigrants arrested at the border has nearly doubled since spring, fueled by Mexico’s economic slump and an administra­tion policy that migrants say expels failed border crossers quickly so they can try again.
Adriana Zehbrauska­s/The New York Times The Mexico side of the U.S. border wall in Nogales, Mexico. The number of immigrants arrested at the border has nearly doubled since spring, fueled by Mexico’s economic slump and an administra­tion policy that migrants say expels failed border crossers quickly so they can try again.

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