Hartford Courant

Migrants find hostility outside NYC

Relocated asylum seekers now pawns in growing standoff

- By Jake Offenhartz

NEWBURGH, N.Y. — Before he left Mauritania, the West African nation of his birth, Mohamed thought of New York as a place of “open arms,” a refuge for immigrants fleeing dire circumstan­ces.

Now that he’s here, seeking political asylum from a government he feared would kill him, he doesn’t feel welcome. The 19-yearold has become a pawn in an escalating standoff between New York City and suburban and upstate communitie­s, which are using lawsuits, emergency orders and political pressure to keep people like him out.

Mohamed is one of about 400 internatio­nal migrants the city has been putting up in a small number of hotels in other parts of the state this month to relieve pressure on its overtaxed homeless shelter system.

Some of the relocated asylum seekers say they now regret leaving the city, pointing to a lack of job opportunit­ies and resources to pursue their asylum cases, as well as a hostile reception.

“It’s better in New York City,” Mohamed said. “There, no one cursed at you and said ‘go back to your country.’”

The Associated Press is withholdin­g Mohamed’s full name at his request to protect the safety of his family in Mauritania. In his home country, Mohamed said he had joined a group of young people to decry the government’s corruption and human rights abuses, including allegation­s of ongoing slavery. Days later, he said a group of men threw him in an unmarked car, took him to a secret room and viciously beat him for

two days.

After a journey that took him across the U.S. border with Mexico, he landed in a shelter system in New York City that he found frightenin­g and overcrowde­d. In one Brooklyn shelter, a room with 40 beds, someone stole his few remaining possession­s as he slept.

So when outreach workers offered him the chance to relocate earlier this month, promising more space and chances to work, Mohamed took it.

He joined other asylum seekers at two hotels a few miles outside the small Hudson River Valley city of Newburgh, about two hours north of the city.

Republican county officials there have accused the city of dumping its problems on its neighbors, while insinuatin­g that the new arrivals pose a danger.

Last week, Orange County

Executive Steven Neuhaus won a temporary restrainin­g order barring the city from sending additional migrants. More than two dozen other counties across New York state have declared emergencie­s in an attempt to block migrant arrivals, even in places where none are planned.

As far as 400 miles north of the city, Niagara County officials have warned of an imminent safety threat, vowing criminal penalties for hotels found to be housing asylum seekers.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat, says he will continue his efforts to disperse some of the more than 40,000 asylum seekers currently in the city’s care.

Meanwhile, some who joined the initial wave of relocation­s have since returned to New York City’s shelter system. Those who don’t have money

for transporta­tion, such as Mohamed, say they are stuck.

“It’s like the desert,” said Mohamed, who studied law and taught himself English in Mauritania. “There’s nothing here for us.”

Some asylum seekers described a sense of being lured upstate on false pretenses, saying outreach workers described local economies in need of off-the-books migrant labor. Instead they have suffered a stream of harassment.

“There are people driving by pretty constantly in big pickup trucks telling them to go back to their country,” said Amy Belsher, an attorney for the New York Civil Liberties Union, describing an event also witnessed by an AP journalist.

“It’s a completely predictabl­e outcome of the local county executives jumping on the migrant ban bandwagon,” she said.

The NYCLU has brought a lawsuit against Orange and Rockland counties alleging

discrimina­tion against migrants.

An attorney for Orange County, Richard Golden, said it was “utterly ridiculous” to accuse the county of fostering xenophobia. The county’s lawsuit against the city, he said, rests on a 2006 state administra­tive directive requiring municipali­ties to meet certain requiremen­ts before transferri­ng homeless individual­s.

Misinforma­tion among local residents has not helped, including a false allegation that migrants displaced homeless veterans inside the hotels — a widely circulated story that has fallen apart.

The number of U.s.-mexico border crossings has declined since May 11, when the Biden administra­tion put new rules in place intended to encourage migrants to apply for asylum online rather than enter the country illegally. But New York and other migrant destinatio­n cities are still dealing with thousands of people who entered the United States before the new rules.

The Crossroads Hotel in Newburgh is now home to men from South and Central America, Senegal, Egypt, Mauritania and Russia. They speak in French and English and Spanish, as they kick a soccer ball in the hotel parking lot, beside a diner and a tangle of highways. A few yards away, a man who once worked as a barber in Venezuela offers haircuts for $5, as another sweeps up.

In order to gain asylum in the United States, they will have to prove they have a “well-founded fear of persecutio­n” over their race, religion, nationalit­y, political opinion or membership in a particular social group.

Mohamed’s experience tracks with a report by the U.S. State Department, which found Mauritania has overseen an expanded crackdown on political dissidents since 2021 and cites allegation­s of torture in unofficial detention centers.

If his story passes a credibilit­y check, it would likely constitute a legitimate asylum claim, according to Jaya Ramji-nogales, an asylum law professor at Temple University. But getting to that stage will require navigating an immigratio­n system under severe strain.

“It was always an under-resourced system but now it’s really at a breaking point,” Ramji-nogales said. “There’s not the political will to put aside the money it needs to function.”

Mohamed said his goal is building his asylum case — something he’s come to believe is not possible in Newburgh.

A few days ago, he missed a key immigratio­n appointmen­t after a car that was supposed to take him to the city never showed up.

“You can’t stay here just sleeping, eating, after that going back to sleeping,” he said. “If you make no progress in your case, they will send you back home. For me, that would be very bad.”

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO/AP ?? Mohamed, a 19-year-old fleeing political persecutio­n in the North African country of Mauritania, stands outside the Crossroads Hotel on Monday in Newburgh, N.Y.“IT’S like the desert,”he says of the locale.“there’s nothing here for us.”
JOHN MINCHILLO/AP Mohamed, a 19-year-old fleeing political persecutio­n in the North African country of Mauritania, stands outside the Crossroads Hotel on Monday in Newburgh, N.Y.“IT’S like the desert,”he says of the locale.“there’s nothing here for us.”

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