San Diego Union-Tribune

MEXICO SAW REFUGEE, ASYLUM CLAIMS ALMOST DOUBLE IN 2021

Largest increase is in applicatio­ns from Haitian migrants

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The number of people applying for refugee or asylum status in Mexico almost doubled between 2019 and 2021, reaching a historic high of more than 130,000, authoritie­s said Monday.

While there was a dip in 2020, that was largely due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In previous years, migrants from other countries had rarely sought protection in Mexico, preferring to make their claims in the United States. But the toughening of border enforcemen­t and the slowdown in U.S. asylum processing has apparently led many to apply for refuge in Mexico.

The Mexican Comission on Refugee Aid, COMAR, said there were 131,448 applicatio­ns filed in 2021, an 87 percent increase over the nearly 70,351 filed in 2019. The numbers dipped to around 41,000 in 2020, in part because the coronaviru­s pandemic made it harder for people to move around or even file applicatio­ns.

The COMAR said the biggest increase was in the number of applicatio­ns from Haitians, which grew from 5,500 in 2019 to more than 51,000 in 2021.

Hondurans, who in previous years had filed the most claims in Mexico, filed 36,361 applicatio­ns in 2021, a relatively more modest rise over the 30,082 they filed in 2019.

Almost 90,000 of the 131,448 requests for protection were filed in the southern Mexico city of Tapachula, near the Guatemalan border. Migrants have complained of the extremely slow pace of paperwork processing in Tapachula, where COMAR offices are swamped by the huge number of requests.

After migrants tried to stage mass walks out of Tapachula in 2021, the Mexican government agreed to bus some to other cities further north to file claims.

Apart from a program to house Guatemalan refugees near the southern border during that country’s 19601996 civil war, Mexico has relatively little experience in dealing with so many refugees or asylum seekers.

The United States has also slowed its own asylum process under Title 42, a public health law that allows U.S. officials to expel adults and families without an opportunit­y for asylum.

The United Nations has urged Mexico to consider granting other, humanitari­an visas to ease the overwhelme­d refugee agency. Under a pilot program, about 200 Haitians have been offered temporary visas that would allow them to work in Mexico.

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