Albuquerque Journal

Court ruling extends uneven treatment for asylum-seekers

- BY ELLIOT SPAGAT

EAGLE PASS, Texas — As the sun set over the Rio Grande, about 120 Cubans, Colombians and Venezuelan­s who waded through waist-deep water stepped into Border Patrol vehicles, soon to be released in the United States to pursue their immigratio­n cases.

Across the border in the Mexican town of Piedras Negras, Honduran families banded together in a section of downtown with cracked sidewalks, narrow streets and few people, unsure where to spend the night because the city’s only shelter was full.

The opposite fortunes illustrate the dual nature of U.S. border enforcemen­t under pandemic rules, known as Title 42 and named for a 1944 public health law. President Joe Biden wanted to end those rules Monday, but a federal judge in Louisiana issued a nationwide injunction that keeps them intact.

The U.S. government has expelled migrants more than 1.9 million times under Title 42, denying them a chance to seek asylum as permitted under U.S. law and internatio­nal treaty for purposes of preventing the spread of COVID-19.

But Title 42 is not applied evenly across nationalit­ies. For example, Mexico agrees to take back migrants from Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador and Mexico. For other nationalit­ies, however, high costs, poor diplomatic relations and other considerat­ions make it difficult for the U.S. to fly migrants to their home countries under Title 42. Instead, they are typically freed in the U.S. to seek asylum or other forms of legal status.

Hondurans in Piedras Negras ask Cubans arriving at the bus station for money, knowing Cubans will have no use for pesos because they will go directly across the border. While Mexico agreed in April to take some Cubans and Nicaraguan­s expelled under Title 42, the vast majority are released in the U.S.

“It was in and out,” Javier Fuentes, 20, said of his onenight stay in a rented house in Piedras Negras. On Sunday morning, he and two other Cuban men walked across the Rio Grande and on a paved road for about an hour until they found a Border Patrol vehicle in Eagle Pass, a Texas town of 25,000 people where migrants cross the river to the edge of a public golf course.

Overnight rains had raised water to about necklevel for most adults, a possible explanatio­n for the absence of groups numbering in the dozens, even over 100, that frequent the area many days.

As the water dropped to waist-level, about three dozen migrants gathered.

 ?? DARIO LOPEZ-MILLS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Migrants from Cuba rest after crossing the Rio Grande in Eagle Pass, Texas, on Sunday.
DARIO LOPEZ-MILLS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Migrants from Cuba rest after crossing the Rio Grande in Eagle Pass, Texas, on Sunday.

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