The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Biden to bring in asylum seekers forced to wait under Trump

Migrant Protection Protocols program comes to an end

- TED HESSON MIMI DWYER

WASHINGTON — The U.S. government next week will begin to gradually process asylum seekers forced to wait in Mexico under a controvers­ial program put in place by former president Donald Trump, officials said.

The moves are part of a plan by the administra­tion of President Joe Biden to end the program, known as the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), an effort complicate­d by the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic and concerns over illegal immigratio­n.

The Trump administra­tion launched the program in 2019 as part of a wide-ranging crackdown on the ability to seek asylum in the United States, which Trump officials depicted as rife with fraud and meritless claims. The initiative forced more than 65,000 non-Mexican asylum seekers back across the border to wait for their U.S. court hearings, although far fewer are believed to still be in Mexico.

The Biden administra­tion will begin by working to process about 25,000 migrants with active claims in the program, officials said on Thursday.

Biden vowed on the campaign trail to roll back restrictiv­e Trump-era immigratio­n policies, including MPP, which is informally known as “remain in Mexico.” His administra­tion suspended new entries into the program when he took office on Jan. 20, but did not immediatel­y put forward a plan to bring those already in the program into the United States.

Republican­s embracing Trump’s hardline immigratio­n views have criticized the ending of MPP and could use it as fuel for political attacks if illegal immigratio­n increases on Biden’s watch.

Top Biden officials have stressed in recent weeks that migrants should not attempt to enter the United States, saying they need more time to build up the capacity to process more asylum seekers.

“Individual­s who are not eligible under this initial phase should wait for further instructio­ns and not travel to the border,” Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro

Mayorkas said in a statement. “Due to the current pandemic, restrictio­ns at the border remain in place and will be enforced.”

During a call with reporters on Thursday evening, three Biden administra­tion officials described the plans to reverse the program, with the first phase beginning on Feb. 19.

Under the plan, migrants will need to register with internatio­nal organizati­ons over the internet or by phone and await instructio­ns. An internatio­nal organizati­on will test migrants for the novel coronaviru­s while they are in Mexico.

Biden officials declined to identify the organizati­ons on Thursday, saying they would be inundated with inquiries.

STARTING SMALL

The migrants’ claims will initially be heard at three ports of entry along the border, with organizati­ons working to identify those in line the longest and those deemed particular­ly vulnerable.

At two of the ports, the Biden administra­tion expects to process 300 people per day, a figure that could increase in time.

“We will start small,” said one of the officials, all of whom requested anonymity.

The Biden officials declined to name the ports where the administra­tion planned to begin processing, citing fears that people would rush to those locations.

The United States developed the strategy in close co-ordination with Mexican authoritie­s, according to the officials.

Even while Biden moves to end one Trump program, he faces growing pressure from advocates to end another known as Title 42. The COVID-era order allows U.S. authoritie­s to rapidly expel to Mexico migrants caught crossing the border illegally, a practice advocates say bypasses due process.

The Biden administra­tion has not said whether it will end that program.

The effort to process MPP enrollees comes as arrests of migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border have been increasing after a steep drop at the beginning of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

U.S. officials in January encountere­d nearly 78,000 migrants attempting to cross the southern border illegally or who were denied at ports of entry, a six per cent increase over the previous month.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A group of migrants walk past plowed farmland after crossing into the United States from Mexico, as they make their way toward a gap in the border wall to surrender to U.S. border patrol, near Penitas, Texas.
REUTERS A group of migrants walk past plowed farmland after crossing into the United States from Mexico, as they make their way toward a gap in the border wall to surrender to U.S. border patrol, near Penitas, Texas.

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