The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. advocates decry border actions

Area’s Haitian Americans criticize what they see as racist mistreatme­nt.

- By Lautaro Grinspan lautaro.grinspan@ajc.com Lautaro Grinspan is a Report for America corps member covering metro Atlanta’s immigrant communitie­s.

As immigratio­n authoritie­s carry out plans to expel thousands of Haitian migrants in Del Rio, Texas, back to their homeland, Haitian Americans and Black immigratio­n advocates in Georgia continue to monitor the situation closely, decrying what they perceive to be racist mistreatme­nt from border officials.

Over the course of the week, viral videos and images appear to show U.S. Border Patrol agents confrontin­g Haitian migrants as they attempted to cross the border at the U.S. shoreline of the Rio Grande. At one point, the footage shows an officer’s horse nearly charging into one of the border crossers. Many photos shared widely on social media show agents twirling long reins and swinging them toward migrants.

“A lot of folks are really, really struggling with what we’re seeing. For us, it just shows blatant racism on the part of America and the Biden administra­tion,” said Judith Delus Montgomery, a founding member of the Haitian American Lawyers Associatio­n of Georgia. “We’ve never seen any other group of immigrants that have come to the border treated in such a horrible manner. And we’re heartbroke­n by it.”

The rapid expulsions of Haitian migrants are taking place under the authority of Title 42, a contested Trump-era policy set in place at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, which let authoritie­s turn migrants away at the border and deny them the opportunit­y to start a legal asylum claim. The policy is intended to limit the spread of an infectious disease, but critics say it is being used to effectivel­y seal the border, circumvent­ing migrants’ rights under internatio­nal and U.S. law to seek asylum.

Last week, a federal judge blocked the Biden administra­tion from continuing to invoke Title 42 to swiftly expel migrant families at the border but stayed the order for 14 days. The government appealed that ruling Friday.

Mass removals to Haiti are taking place on the heels of a destabiliz­ing presidenti­al assassinat­ion in July and a devastatin­g 7.2 magnitude earthquake in August, which killed more than 2,000 people. Hard hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, the Caribbean nation is seeing poverty and hunger on the rise.

“Haitian Americans in the diaspora, we’ve kind of been watching things unfold in Haiti throughout this year, and it’s been really traumatizi­ng for us,” said Delus Montgomery, who has been practicing immigratio­n law in the metro Atlanta area for 10 years.

On Monday, Department of

Homeland Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said that while DHS has extended humanitari­an protection (known as Temporary Protected Status, or TPS) to Haitians who had arrived to the United States before July 29, those who cross into the country now are not covered. Delus Montgomery said that misunderst­andings about eligibilit­y status for TPS likely motivated Haitians to make the journey to the border.

“I think that that made them feel like, listen, you know, the Haitians in the U.S. have received TPS because things are so bad in Haiti. And so maybe we too can be considered, right?”

Delus Montgomery said that the Haitian American Lawyers Associatio­n of Georgia is working with Haitian legal groups across the country to send a group of lawyers to Del Rio over the coming days. In an interview with the AJC, Lovette Kargbo Thompson, Atlanta organizer with the Black Alliance for Just Immigratio­n, said that the treatment of Haitians at the border is indicative of systemic challenges faced by Black people in the U.S. immigratio­n system.

“The historical racism and discrimina­tion directed at Black people in America can exacerbate the difficulti­es that Black immigrants and Black asylum seekers face,” she said.

“Our call to action at this time is to ask that the Biden administra­tion grant humanitari­an parole to Black asylum seekers at the U.s.-mexico border and to stop all expulsions and deportatio­ns. ... It’s very dishearten­ing to see people just not being treated with the human dignity and respect that they deserve.”

 ?? FERNANDO LLANO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Migrants, many from Haiti, wade the Rio Grande from Del Rio, Texas, to return to Ciudad Acuna, Mexico, on Tuesday to avoid deportatio­n from the U.S., which is flying Haitians camped in a Texas border town back to their homeland and blocking others from crossing the border from Mexico.
FERNANDO LLANO/ASSOCIATED PRESS Migrants, many from Haiti, wade the Rio Grande from Del Rio, Texas, to return to Ciudad Acuna, Mexico, on Tuesday to avoid deportatio­n from the U.S., which is flying Haitians camped in a Texas border town back to their homeland and blocking others from crossing the border from Mexico.

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