The Guardian (USA)

‘A backlog of bodies’: why this is the deadliest year for the US-Mexico border

- Alexandra Villarreal in Eagle Pass, Texas

Along the US-Mexico border, overwhelme­d mortuaries in Eagle Pass, Texas have been forced to stockpile a “backlog of bodies” in a city-owned refrigerat­ed truck.

The local government bought but never used the makeshift morgue amid the Covid-19 pandemic, when such desperate sights were not unheard of in various parts of the US, including Texas.

Yet in recent weeks, the truck has come to embody a renewed abundance of death in the border town with a population of roughly 29,000, deployed as a stark stopgap measure to keep bodies preserved before they can go to an overworked medical examiner, Eagle Pass fire chief Manuel Mello III told the Guardian.

Mello recently counted nine overflow corpses languishin­g inside the refrigerat­ed truck, a tally that was on the rise.

“They’re all migrants,” he said solemnly.

Along the 2,000-mile (3,219km) boundary between the US and Mexico, the 2022 fiscal year proved the deadliest on record for people trying to make unauthoriz­ed crossings of this heavily-patrolled internatio­nal line.

In just 12 months, more than 800 migrants lost their lives in search of a better one as they disappeare­d beneath the tumultuous waters of the Rio Grande, succumbed to blistering summer heat, crashed in a smuggler’s vehicle, tumbled from a border barrier,or otherwise had their travels violently cut short.

In Eagle Pass’s regional enforcemen­t sector alone, Border Patrol agents discovered more than 200 dead migrants between October 2021 and the end of July, compared to an already heartbreak­ing 34 bodies during the entire 2020 fiscal year.

Ahead of this week’s crucial midterm elections, Republican­s have manipulate­d these harrowing statistics as yet another opportunit­y to make much ado about what various rightwing players call US president Joe Biden’s “open border policies”, accusing the administra­tion of incompeten­ce that is causing “body bags [to] keep piling up”.

But while those deceptivel­y simple talking points have proven persuasive among American voters – a plurality of whom say Republican­s are better suited than Democrats to address immigratio­n – they mask a far starker reality.

For large swathes of forcibly displaced people fleeing unlivable poverty, persecutio­n, hunger, climate change and bloodshed in places ranging from Haiti to Venezuela to Honduras, the USMexico border is not open at all.

It’s close to sealed by a hostile combinatio­n of pandemic-era public health measures cynically retooled as federal immigratio­n control and mass policing by state troops who arrest, jail and criminaliz­e migrants.

Cruelly, these hardline deterrence mechanisms advanced by both Democrats and Republican­s have likely only made the US’s south-west border bloodier.

Current US policy is predicated on a false assumption that if only the consequenc­es for crossing the southwest border are severe enough, people will stop trying.

For decades, presidenti­al administra­tions with disparate political views have unified under the paradigm of prevention through deterrence, erecting physical and legal obstacles to discourage people from crossing.

Deterrence as a strategy has informed some of the US’s most controvers­ial immigratio­n policies, from separating families, to detaining children, to stranding asylum seekers in dangerous Mexican border towns.

But desperate people still find ways to make it onto US soil: last fiscal year, Customs and Border Protection documented nearly 2.38m enforcemen­t encounters at the southern border, a record high causing headaches for Joe Biden as conservati­ves accuse the president of being “lax” on border crime.

The truth is more complex, and not at all lax. More than a million of last fiscal year’s border enforcemen­t encounters were processed under Title 42, now invoked as a federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t tool but originally disguised as a public health measure amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

The policy allowed the Trump and now the Biden administra­tions to expel huge numbers of people from the US without even letting them ask for asylum, seemingly in violation of domestic and internatio­nal law.

Far from ending unauthoriz­ed migration, the invocation of Title 42 has in fact dramatical­ly inflated the number of encounters at the USMexico border, as people who are expelled feel compelled to cross again – and again, and again. Sometimes, relentless migrants have been so determined to complete their journeys that they’ve risked life and limb dozens of times, fueling a political and humanitari­an disaster.

Yet even though these expulsions have proved ill-advised both optically and ethically,Biden has now expanded the use of Title 42 by adding Venezuelan­s to the list of nationalit­ies targeted for return to Mexico, an apparent betrayal of his campaign promises to uphold the legal right to seek asylum and a paradox as his administra­tion ostensibly fights to sunset the practice in court.

Beyond these mixed messages, the Biden administra­tion has repeatedly acknowledg­ed that the US immigratio­n system is broken. Luckily, actual solutions abound, including innovative federal legislatio­n creating genuine pathways for people to migrate legally. For one, the agricultur­al sector is begging Congress to pass the Farm Workforce Modernizat­ion Act and shore up muchneeded immigrant labor, as food insecurity and national security concerns raise alarms amid a dwindling domestic food supply and surging food costs.

For another, the House has already advanced the American Dream and Promise Act, which would create a pathway to citizenshi­p for so-called Dreamers, who were brought to the US unlawfully as children, and forcibly displaced people with temporary protected status (TPS), two demographi­cs who have been stuck in a precarious legal limbo, sometimes for decades, despite significan­t contributi­ons to the nation.

Even effective humanitari­an policies are not that difficult to devise and implement; the Biden White House already did so when it admitted over 100,000 Ukrainians in just about five months amid the ongoing war to resist Russia’s invasion.

But when the administra­tion announced a similar parole program for Venezuelan­s last month, modeled after Uniting for Ukraine, it initially allotted a meager 24,000 spots. That’s a drop in the bucket compared to the 7.1 million Venezuelan refugees and migrants worldwide, many in our own backyard.

So despite having solutions so close at hand, a lack of will jams up legislativ­e reform via Congress.

Republican­s who publicly tout bipartisan­ship don’t engage on immigratio­n reform, claiming “it’s not possible to do it while the border crisis is raging”.

“What the Biden administra­tion ought to do is focus on regaining control of the border, fixing our broken asylum system,” US senator for Texas John Cornyn told Roll Call. “And then I think we can have that conversati­on.”

So goes the vicious cycle: Republican­s avoid solutions, which exacerbate­s the situation, then they shout about inaction and it buys them votes and headlines in the New York Times like “Democrats twist and turn on immigratio­n as Republican­s attack in waves”.

Some Democrats appease their loudest detractors amid election vulnerabil­ity.

And both parties continue to police people seeking security and opportunit­y over violence, persecutio­n and poverty as if they’re national security threats.

In the shadow of it all, the corpses amass.

Back in Eagle Pass, locals like Rosalinda Medrano who have lived for decades along a porous border understand that migrants have and will always come or, increasing­ly, die trying.

“Even though there’s one fence, and another fence, and so many troopers, and the National Guard, and you name it – Border Patrol, here and there and everywhere – it’s not gonna stop these families,” she said, adding simply: “They want a better life.”

 ?? Photograph: Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty Images ?? Migrants rest after crossing the Rio Grande River in Eagle Pass, Texas.
Photograph: Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty Images Migrants rest after crossing the Rio Grande River in Eagle Pass, Texas.
 ?? Photograph: Dario Lopez-Mills/AP ?? A group of migrants stand next to the border wall in Eagle Pass, Texas.
Photograph: Dario Lopez-Mills/AP A group of migrants stand next to the border wall in Eagle Pass, Texas.

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