Texarkana Gazette

U.S. sending Mexican migrants 1,000 miles from border

-

PHOENIX — The Trump administra­tion said Tuesday it will start deporting about 250 Mexicans a week on flights from Tucson, Arizona, to Guadalajar­a, over 1,000 miles from the border.

The move reflects how Mexicans have become a higher priority in border enforcemen­t as fewer Central Americans head to the U.S. The flights aim to deter attempts at crossing the border illegally.

Immigratio­n authoritie­s began the repatriati­on flights to Mexico’s interior in December. The Department of Homeland Security said there will be two flights a week, starting Jan. 24.

Heather Swift, a department spokeswoma­n, said the flights satisfy a longstandi­ng request of the Mexican government and will take people who are deported closer to their hometowns. Mexicans from states that border the U.S. will not be put on the flights.

Mexicans are exempt from a U.S. policy introduced a year ago to make asylum-seekers wait in Mexico for hearings in U.S. immigratio­n court. More than 56,000 asylum-seekers had been turned back by the end of November, according to Syracuse University’s Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use, about twothirds of them Guatemalan or Honduran.

The policy, called “Migrant

Protection Protocols,” has expanded across the border as the number of Central Americans arriving at the border has plunged.

Mexicans accounted for half of the arrests and people stopped at the U.S. border in December, more than three times more than any other nationalit­y and a shift from much of last year, when Guatemala and Honduras were the top countries of origin.

“This is another example of the

Trump administra­tion working with the government of Mexico to address the ongoing border security crisis,” Swift said.

A similar program in place from 2004 to 2012 also flew Mexicans who had crossed the border through Arizona deep into Mexican cities at the cost of $100 million over its lifespan. The repatriati­on program was meant as a deterrent for border-crossers who might attempt the trek again.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States