Houston Chronicle

Having Mexico stem flow of refugees hurts the kids

- By Bill Frelick Frelick is the Refugee Rights Program director at Human Rights Watch. He was a researcher and editor for the new Human Rights Watch report, “Closed Doors: Mexico’s Failure to Protect Central American Refugee and Migrant Children.”

In the summer of 2014, the Obama administra­tion had a problem. As Congress was debating comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform, tens of thousands of children, and in many cases their mothers, fleeing gang violence in Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala were turning up at the border.

Even though irregular crossings of the southweste­rn border were, in fact, at their lowest number in 40 years, partisan rhetoric said otherwise. It became a political imperative, if not a humanitari­an one, for the administra­tion to demonstrat­e its control over the southern border.

So it made an expensive deal with Mexico to keep these desperate women and children from ever reaching the U.S. border. It would encourage Mexico “to interdict the flow of illegal migrants from Central America bound for the United States,” according to Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson.

At the same time, it would establish an alternativ­e: a safe and orderly way for Central American children to apply for refugee status from their own countries to join parents who were already lawfully in the United States.

A combinatio­n of U.S. funding and diplomatic pressures spurred the Mexican government to action. On the same day in July 2014 that President Obama sent Congress an emergency supplement­al request of $3.7 billion “to comprehens­ively address this urgent humanitari­an situation,” his Mexican counterpar­t, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, issued a decree announcing the Programa Frontera Sur (Southern Border Program) to boost migration enforcemen­t efforts in four southern Mexican states.

The result was often a fast bus ride back from Mexico to the deadly places people had fled with no real opportunit­y for protection either in Mexico or back in their home countries.

The Congressio­nal Research Service estimated that U.S. State Department funding to support migration enforcemen­t on Mexico’s southern border would exceed $86.6 million prior to the enactment of the appropriat­ion for fiscal year 2015. The U.S. Congress increased the president’s $115 million request for fiscal year 2015 by another $79 million, specifying that it was to be used “for helping Mexico secure its southern border.”

A year later, the number of apprehensi­ons at the U.S.-Mexico border had fallen to 70,400, a 57 percent drop from the previous year. During that same time, apprehensi­ons of Central American migrants in Mexico rose by 75 percent, to nearly 93,000.

The Mexican government reported a 79 percent increase in the number of Central Americans deported from Mexico in the first four months of 2015.

While Mexico used the substantia­l influx of U.S. dollars to beef up its migration control capacity, it did not significan­tly improve reception conditions or its capacity to process asylum claims for the additional numbers that predictabl­y would be apprehende­d. Despite a 65 percent increase in asylum applicatio­ns in 2014, Mexico’s refugee agency, the Mexican Refugee Aid Commission, received a budget increase of less than 5 percent for 2015.

Meanwhile, the new U.S. resettleme­nt program for Central American children was beset with logistical and bureaucrat­ic problems and far-too-narrow eligibilit­y criteria.

But no problem was greater than the requiremen­t that children under threat from a gang stay and wait in their country while the United States slowly processed their applicatio­ns. Nearly a year and a half later, a paltry 32 Central American refugees had been admitted through the program, out of more than 6,000 applicants.

Given the U.S. government’s role in promoting Mexico’s interdicti­on of Central American migrants and asylum seekers, it should earmark proportion­ate funding and support to improve and expand Mexico’s capacity to process asylum claims and provide social support for asylum seekers and refugees.

It should also, as Homeland Secretary Johnson announced it intended to do, expand U.S. refugee resettleme­nt from the region.

The United States should broaden the eligibilit­y criteria beyond children inside their countries with lawfully present parents in the United States and consider for admission a wider range of Central American refugees who have fled to Mexico or other countries in the region.

For many decades, the United States has been a world leader in promoting refugee rights and solutions. At a time when internatio­nal solidarity and responsibi­lity sharing have never been under greater strain, and when the European Union is seeking to persuade Turkey to interdict Syrian and Iraqi refugees to keep them from reaching Europe, U.S. leadership is needed more than ever.

But its efforts to use Mexico to stem the Central American refugee flow not only exposes Central American children to danger but sets a bad example that potentiall­y harms refugees in Europe and throughout the world.

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