San Francisco Chronicle

U.S. to send asylum seekers to Honduras

- By Molly HennessyFi­ske and Molly O’Toole Molly HennessyFi­ske and Molly O’Toole are Los Angeles Times writers.

The U.S. is preparing to send asylum seekers to Honduras, even if they are not from the Central American country, and effectivel­y end their chances of seeking asylum in the United States, according to documents obtained by the Los Angeles Times.

Under an agreement signed in New York on Sept. 25 by

Kevin McAleenan, at the time the secretary of Homeland Security, and Honduras’ foreign minister, María Dolores Agüero, adults and families seeking asylum at the U.S.Mexico border could be sent to Honduras without the chance to seek asylum in the U.S.

Earlier this year, the administra­tion reached a similar agreement with Guatemala to take asylum seekers at the U.S.Mexico border, even if they were not Guatemalan.

Since the Guatemala agreement took effect on Nov. 22, U.S. officials have forcibly sent a number of Honduran adults to Guatemala, and last week, they began sending some Honduran families, according to communicat­ions obtained by The Times and several U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services officials.

What’s significan­t about the Honduras agreement is that it is the first to explicitly state that if Honduras or another country rejects the individual­s’ asylum claims, they won’t get another chance to apply in the United States, according to the text. Previously, the administra­tion had suggested that if, say, a

Guatemalan were forcibly sent to Honduras and denied asylum there, she might get another chance in the United States. The text of the U.S.Honduras agreement makes clear that is not the case.

The new agreement is part of a broader effort to restrict asylumseek­ing at the southern border. The Trump administra­tion has reached similar agreements with El Salvador and Guatemala, obligating them to take other Central Americans who reach the U.S. border.

Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, which advocates for stricter limits on immigratio­n, called the latest agreement ”an important part of a broad effort to return asylum to the narrow use for which it was intended.”

But a member of Congress condemned the move.

Calling Honduras “a narcostate that is every bit as unprepared to participat­e as the other partner nations of Guatemala and El Salvador,” Rep. Norma Torres (DPomona) said: “These agreements are anything but safe – the Trump administra­tion is rejecting our moral obligation­s and shipping asylum seekers to the very same danger zones that they are fleeing.”

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