Philippine Daily Inquirer

WHITE HOUSE: ‘VAST MAJORITY’ OF MIGRANTS AT US-MEXICO BORDER WILL BE TURNED AWAY

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United States will turn away most migrants apprehende­d at its border with Mexico under a Trump-era policy aimed at limiting the spread of the coronaviru­s and to give the Biden administra­tion time to implement “humane” asylum processing systems, a White House official said on Wednesday.

The comments followed reports of the release of some migrant families into the United States and increasing pressure on President Joe Biden to reverse the restrictiv­e policies of his predecesso­r, Donald Trump.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki told a news briefing that because of the pandemic “and the fact that we have not had the time as an administra­tion to put in place a humane, comprehens­ive process for processing individual­s who are coming to the border, now is not the time to come.”

“The vast majority of people will be turned away,” she added.

US officials in Texas last week released hundreds of Central American migrant families from custody amid concerns of overcrowdi­ng in Border Patrol facilities after local authoritie­s in Mexico balked at taking them back.

Biden, who took office last month, has left in place a Trump-era COVID order called Title 42 that allows US authoritie­s to rapidly expel to Mexico migrants caught crossing the border illegally.

Cruel practice

Carol Rose, executive director of the ACLU of Massachuse­tts, which filed a new lawsuit over the policy on Monday, said it was using a “guise” of public health to undermine legal protection­s for asylum seekers.

“Our fight for these families continues, until and unless the Biden administra­tion ends this cruel practice once and for all,” Rose said in a statement.

US officials in January encountere­d nearly 78,000 migrants attempting to cross the southern border illegally or who were denied at ports of entry, a 6 percent increase over the previous month.

The Biden administra­tion also faces pressure from congressio­nal Democrats over the deportatio­n practices.

Hispanic and Black lawmakers in recent days sent a pair of letters to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas calling on him to adhere to new enforcemen­t priorities outlined in a Jan. 20 memo that are much more targeted than Trump’s broad immigratio­n crackdown.

The memo called for immigratio­n officers to prioritize national security threats, people who arrived in the United States on or after Nov. 1, 2020, and people with certain criminal conviction­s who are determined to be a public safety threat.

 ??  ?? RISK-TAKERS Migrants walk out of the Rio Bravo River in Mexico after crossing it to turn themselves in to US Border Patrol agents and request for asylum in El Paso, Texas, on Feb. 10.
RISK-TAKERS Migrants walk out of the Rio Bravo River in Mexico after crossing it to turn themselves in to US Border Patrol agents and request for asylum in El Paso, Texas, on Feb. 10.

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