Dayton Daily News

Border apprehensi­ons drop 8 straight months

- By Colleen Long and Ben Fox

— The number of border apprehensi­ons has dropped for the eighth straight month, following crackdowns by the Trump administra­tion that include forcing asylum seekers back over the U.S.-Mexico border to wait out their claims, a Homeland Security official said Monday.

The official said the number of encounters with border officials over the past four months was 165,000. A year earlier during the same time it was about 242,000. The official spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the official results have not been released.

The tally for the month of January was about 36,000, including apprehensi­ons of people crossing illegally and migrants who were declared inadmissib­le by border officers at a port of entry. It was a 10% decline from December.

The monthly tally is down almost 75% from the peak last May, when there were more than 144,000 encounters with migrants, the large majority families from Central America who are not easily returned over the border. The immigratio­n system was vastly strained last spring, with migrants crammed for weeks into small border stations not meant to hold people beyond a few days. News of the conditions in the border stations, coupled with migrant deaths, promoted massive outrage and pushed Congress into emergency funding to help ease the crush.

The reduction comes at a cost. More than 55,000 asylum seekers, including families and pregnant women, have been sent over the border to Mexico to wait out their asylum cases and have faced sickness and squalid conditions in makeshift camps, plus assault and kidnapping by cartels that patrol the borderland­s.

Mexico has also stepped up its own border enforcemen­t, making clear that caravans that once traveled through its territory are no longer allowed to do so, following intense pressure and threatened trade tariffs from Washington last year. And U.S. policy now essentiall­y bans anyone from claiming asylum if they crossed through another country first. Officials are also now sending asylum seekers to Central American nations as part of border security agreements with Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.

Despite the nosedive at the border, asylum seekers are still signing up on a waiting list to enter the U.S. at an official crossing in San Luis, Arizona. U.S. Customs and Border Protection calls the Mexican shelter that manages the list to say how many asylum claims it will process each day. The shelter estimates the wait at three to four months.

 ?? CEDAR ATTANASIO / AP ?? A journalist in Anapara, Mexico, sticks her microphone through a through a border fence to interview a Border Patrol agent on Friday, Jan. 31, in Sunland Park, New Mexico.
CEDAR ATTANASIO / AP A journalist in Anapara, Mexico, sticks her microphone through a through a border fence to interview a Border Patrol agent on Friday, Jan. 31, in Sunland Park, New Mexico.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States