Porterville Recorder

Migrants anxious before court dates in Texas tents

- By MARIA VERZA

NUEVO LAREDO, Mexico — Abel Oset was seized with panic. After an 11-country odyssey that began when he and his namesake son fled Cuba, and a brief moment on U.S. soil, he was crossing back into America.

But he wasn’t sure he’d be able to stay.

The two were going to plead their case in a court set up inside a tent in Laredo, beamed via video conference to a judge in another city — the latest attempt to clear a massive backlog of asylum cases.

They were among more than 100 migrants on Tuesday’s docket — though only 38 had arrived. So much depended on this hearing; Oset dreaded the very real possibilit­y that he and his 22-year-old son would be sent back over the internatio­nal bridge, back to Nuevo Laredo and its cartels and violence.

Some migrants, awaiting hearings, arrived at the bridge before sunset Monday from Monterrey, hundreds of miles from the border. Others left the city hostels early to avoid moving at night.

Acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin Mcaleenan headed to the area to tour the new facility on Tuesday, a day after it opened.

The Department of Homeland Security has said it planned to spend $155 million to build and operate the tent courts but expects the costs to be less than that. But critics have denounced the proceeding­s because they are closed to the public and difficult for attorneys to access to provide legal representa­tion.

For Trump, curbing immigratio­n remains his signature issue and his administra­tion is also dealing with a massive increase in migrants, mostly Central American families, that has strained the immigratio­n system. A major aim of these programs is to deter people from coming to the Southern border. Mexico has cracked down on migrants coming to its Southern border, and the U.S. is working on diplomatic agreements with other Northern Triangle countries.

The U.S. Supreme Court this week made it vastly more difficult for people to win asylum, allowing the new rules into effect during litigation challengin­g them. The rules bar anyone who passed through another country from claiming asylum, though some other protection­s may still be available.

Oset hoped because he came before July 16, when the regulation­s came into effect, he’ll pass. But he must also convince the judge he is afraid not only to return to his home country, but to Mexico.

“I fall into the old law, and I think that can help us,” he said. “We’ll see.”

He got lucky; they were allowed into the U.S., but 10 other adults and three children in the group were returned back.

Oset and his son arrived at the U.s.-mexico border in April. They fled Cuba when a neighbor reported him to state security for watching a documentar­y about the Castro family’s possession­s and he was beaten, he said.

At the border, the two were returned to Mexico to wait out their claims.

Awaiting his hearing in the pre-dawn hours on Tuesday, Oset lay on the floor of a migration building in the dangerous state of Tamaulipas. He spoke of the criminals who stalk the bridge, picking off migrants. He and his son were targeted by kidnappers twice but had no money and were turned loose with warnings not to return.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY FERNANDO LLANO ?? Cuban Abel Oset Jr., center, and his father Abel Oset, behind him, show their identifica­tion to a U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer before their appointmen­ts to apply for asylum in United States, as they cross Internatio­nal Bridge 1 to leave Nuevo Laredo, Mexico and enter Laredo, Texas, Tuesday, Sept. 17. Tent courtrooms opened Monday in two Texas border cities to help process thousands of migrants who are being forced by the Trump administra­tion to wait in Mexico while their requests for asylum wind through clogged immigratio­n courts.
AP PHOTO BY FERNANDO LLANO Cuban Abel Oset Jr., center, and his father Abel Oset, behind him, show their identifica­tion to a U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer before their appointmen­ts to apply for asylum in United States, as they cross Internatio­nal Bridge 1 to leave Nuevo Laredo, Mexico and enter Laredo, Texas, Tuesday, Sept. 17. Tent courtrooms opened Monday in two Texas border cities to help process thousands of migrants who are being forced by the Trump administra­tion to wait in Mexico while their requests for asylum wind through clogged immigratio­n courts.

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