Albuquerque Journal

Walls won’t solve new challenges at SW border

Separating legitimate asylum seekers from economic immigrants and terrorists is of growing importance

- BY ALEXANDRA ZAVIS AND BRIAN BENNETT TRIBUNE WASHINGTON BUREAU

The surge of people from Africa, Asia and the Caribbean who have been trekking in evergreate­r numbers across the Americas in hopes of reaching the United States presents the new U.S. administra­tion with a conundrum.

Most of them arrive without identifica­tion or travel documents, and U.S. security officials worry that global terrorist networks could use the illicit flows as cover to smuggle operatives into the U.S. — as the Islamic State has done in Europe.

But deploying ever-larger border walls, of the kind that President-elect Donald Trump has pledged, will do little to resolve the problem: Most of these longdistan­ce migrants surrender voluntaril­y to U.S. border officers, and claim protection­s guaranteed under U.S. and internatio­nal law.

The dynamic at the Southwest border has changed. And barricades, many immigratio­n experts have begun to argue, are an investment in the last war.

What is needed now, immigratio­n experts are realizing, is the ability to quickly determine who among this much more diverse new group of migrants is fleeing war and political repression — and who may simply be coming to the U.S. in hopes of earning a better living.

Enforcemen­t isn’t the answer

The dilemma has never been more acute, as the nature of immigratio­n at the Southwest border shifts from hundreds of thousands of Mexicans attempting to cross furtively into the U.S., to more people from faraway conflicts and centers of violent political turmoil — migrants who have rights to asylum and assistance.

“The challenge at the border is very different,” said Cecilia Munoz, a senior adviser to President Obama and head of the White House’s Domestic Policy Council. “I don’t think there is anybody in (the Department of Homeland Security) who really believes we can enforce our way out of this problem.”

The government has invested heavily in stemming the historic flow of undocument­ed migrants from Mexico, deploying new technology and increasing the size of the Border Patrol from about 10,000 agents in 2004 to 21,000 today. This has greatly increased the risks and cost of the trip.

The Pew Research Center now estimates that more Mexicans are returning to Mexico than are migrating to the U.S. — a product in part of economic growth south of the border, as well as reduced opportunit­ies in the U.S. since the recession nine years ago.

Political considerat­ions

Today’s unauthoriz­ed arrivals are a more diverse group, both in terms of where they are coming from and the reasons that propelled them to embark on their long, dangerous journeys. They include hundreds of thousands of people fleeing the violence and dire poverty of Central America, as well as smaller but rapidly growing numbers from Haiti, India, Ghana and beyond.

Unlike generation­s of Mexicans before them, many of these would-be Americans present themselves to U.S. authoritie­s and asking to be admitted on humanitari­an grounds.

About 7,300 people from outside Latin America were apprehende­d while trying to slip across the southern border in the 11 months ending in August, while an additional 48,000 showed up at official ports of entry without the necessary paperwork and were deemed inadmissib­le.

Careful vetting of those who request asylum is one important step, officials say. Authoritie­s in 2015 detained 100 people at the U.S.-Mexico border whom they believed might have ties to terrorism suspects in other nations, according to figures released by the office of U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif.

“These smuggling routes are a potential vulnerabil­ity to our homeland,” retired Marine Gen. John F. Kelly, former head of the U.S. Southern Command and Trump’s choice to lead the Department of Homeland Security, said in congressio­nal testimony in 2015. “Terrorist organizati­ons could seek to leverage those same smuggling routes to move operatives with intent to cause grave harm to our citizens, or even bring weapons of mass destructio­n into the United States.”

But many immigratio­n experts are skeptical that spending more money on fortifying the border will do much to stanch the flow.

“When you have mixed flows, in many ways you have a more complicate­d enforcemen­t challenge,” said Doris Meissner, a senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute in Washington who served as immigratio­n commission­er in the Clinton administra­tion. “You need to decide as a country to whom you are going to provide protection to stay in the United States, and then separate those people from those who are economic migrants and need to be returned.”

Such decisions aren’t handled by border agents, she noted. They are handled by asylum officers and immigratio­n judges, parts of the immigratio­n system that have not benefited from the kinds of budget increases awarded to border enforcemen­t.

The result is an enormous backlog. The number of cases awaiting resolution in federal immigratio­n courts has tripled in the last decade, reaching an alltime high of 526,175 at the end of November, according to figures collected by the Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use at Syracuse University. Cases had been pending an average of 678 days.

Compliatin­g factors

The diverse background­s of those seeking to enter the U.S. has added to delays. Immigratio­n attorneys say there are not enough translator­s at border crossings and in detention centers who are proficient in Hindi, Bengali and the many other languages spoken by the new arrivals.

Lawyers and activists also complain that immigratio­n judges lack detailed knowledge about the political and social climate in countries such as Bangladesh and India, and may be too quick to send them home.

Though both countries are nominally peaceful democracie­s, political feuds and ethnic and religious discrimina­tion are widely cited as factors motivating some citizens to flee.

Migrants’ chances of being granted protection are significan­tly higher if they have legal representa­tion. But the government does not pay for this, and many struggle to find a lawyer they can afford or who will take their cases pro bono — especially if they are in custody.

The bigger the backlog in immigratio­n court, the harder it is to find room for new arrivals in the detention system. That has meant releasing migrants with a notice to appear in court at a future date, a practice that critics argue only increases the incentive for others to attempt the trip.

“You have to stop rewarding people for coming here illegally,” said Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, which favors restrictiv­e immigratio­n policies. “You are just going to get more and more of them.”

He said the Obama administra­tion has often set the bar too low for determinin­g who is has a “credible fear” of persecutio­n and is thus eligible for asylum considerat­ion.

“The fact is that the reason somebody is traveling thousands of miles from sub-Saharan Africa or South Asia to the United States is because they have a relative here who has a dishwashin­g job for them and a couch for them to sleep on,” he said. “If they were actually fleeing for their lives, or fleeing imprisonme­nt, they would have applied for asylum in the first safe country they got to, and every single one of those people has passed through multiple countries where they were not being persecuted.”

Other experts, however, worry that lives could be endangered if asylum officers don’t cast a wide net.

“The consequenc­es of denying asylum to people who need it are so dire, we should take every effort to not deny asylum to someone who needs it,” said Stephen Legomsky, who served as chief council for Homeland Security’s immigratio­n services agency from 2011 to 2013.

He believes one of the best long-term strategies is to help address the conditions that are driving people to flee their homelands.

The Obama administra­tion has increased the amount of aid the U.S. provides to Central American countries, from which large numbers claim asylum out of fear of gang violence.

U.S. officials are also working with the government of Costa Rica so that those Central Americans petitionin­g for asylum in the U.S. can have their cases considered there, rather than embark on the dangerous trek north.

That kind of regional collaborat­ion is critical, humanitari­an officials say.

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