Santa Fe New Mexican

Mexico border towns are reshaped by migrant crisis

- By Elisabeth Malkin

CIUDAD JUÁREZ, Mexico — There is a new hint of life in the dilapidate­d downtown of Ciudad Juárez, which residents abandoned as a recession and drug gang murders ravaged the city a decade ago.

Thousands of Cubans, waiting in limbo for a decision on their requests for asylum in the United States, have made the crumbling few blocks their home, finding work and renting cheap hotel rooms.

The first Cuban restaurant opened in April, when a migrant staff of 10 began serving up the traditiona­l shredded beef dish known as ropa vieja. Banners bear the Cuban flag on the sidewalk outside, signaling how the city’s newcomers are starting to forge a life here, even if it still remains difficult, uncertain and temporary.

“Everything is a question of luck,” said Ramón Santo Domingo Ramos, the restaurant’s cook.

Border communitie­s like Ciudad Juárez, filled with migrants from Cuba, Central America and elsewhere, are adapting to a new reality: They may be the final destinatio­n, and no longer just a stop on the way north to the United States.

President Donald Trump’s strict anti-immigratio­n policies mean that a growing number of migrants are stranded in such cities. The divisive debate over immigratio­n in the United States has taken on more resonance in Ciudad Juárez, after a gunman fueled by racism killed 22 people last weekend at a Walmart just across the border in El Paso.

“They want to cross to the United States,” said Armando Cabada, the mayor of Ciudad Juárez. “They have the American dream, but they run into Trump’s wall.”

Since the beginning of the year, the Trump administra­tion has been sending some migrants who have requested asylum back to Mexico as their cases wind through the courts. In June, after Trump threatened tariffs on all exports, Mexico agreed to accept an increase in the number of migrants returned under that policy.

Since then, the number of migrants in Ciudad Juárez has swelled to more than 12,000, with the expectatio­n that as many as 300 a day will be returned to the city from the United States.

Officials are scrambling to accommodat­e them, working with Catholic and evangelica­l churches to open new shelters and collaborat­ing with business and farm groups to offer jobs.

This month, the Mexican federal government opened a cavernous shelter in a vacant factory to process asylum-seekers returned from the United States. The plan is for migrants to stay temporaril­y while they seek work or move to one of more than a dozen shelters run by the churches.

In a side room at the shelter, a dozen people (one with a baby) listened as a computer instructor from a local foundation led them through basic skills. Soldiers served a lunch of pasta soup, tortillas, chicken and beans to about 160 people, while a couple of doctors were on call.

“We are dealing locally with a situation that we didn’t provoke,” said Enrique Valenzuela, the general coordinato­r for the Population Commission of Chihuahua, the home state of Ciudad Juárez.

“Juárez is already another city,” he said. “Juárez is changing since this phenomenon began.”

Ciudad Juárez has long been a city of migrants, sprawling ever further into the desert as Mexicans arrived from the south with the same hope of crossing into the United States. Some stayed either by choice or necessity as the border hardened, and they found jobs in the export factories that now employ more than a quarter-million people and tie the city firmly to the United States.

At the Good Pastor shelter, families languish in crowded rooms with little to occupy them except their phones. “It’s a cultural question,” said Juan Fierro García, the pastor who directs the shelter, which is expanding from 110 places to 250. “Here, anybody who wants work can find it, even without legal status.”

 ?? CELIA TALBOT TOBIN NEW YORK TIMES ?? A child waits for a shower ata migrant shelter Aug. 2 in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico.
CELIA TALBOT TOBIN NEW YORK TIMES A child waits for a shower ata migrant shelter Aug. 2 in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico.

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