Imperial Valley Press

Mexico studies building new immigratio­n facilities

- B4

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico is studying a change in the way it handles the migrants who have been overwhelmi­ng its facilities near the border with Guatemala, and may try to keep more of them in newly constructe­d voluntary shelters rather than in detention facilities.

Tonatiuh Guillén, director of the National Immigratio­n Institute, told The Associated Press this week that migrants requesting asylum or certain other visas would be free to come and go from the facilities. He said the first such shelter would be built in Chiapas near the southern border.

Guillén said o cials are looking at a 37-acre (15 hectare) property in Tapachula. “If everything goes well, in the second half of the year we would begin design and hopefully constructi­on of the new facility that is more like a shelter and not confinemen­t, coexistenc­e and not control,” he said.

Mexico has been overwhelme­d by the flow of U.S.-bound migrants, especially Central American families with children, in recent months, many of whom have travelled in caravans.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has insisted that his main strategy to deal with migration is to improve conditions in their countries of origin so they don’t feel compelled to leave.

However, detentions and deportatio­ns in Mexico are up 150% so far this year.

Guillén did not provide many details for the plan that is still being developed. But he said the idea is to reduce the number of immigrant detention centers — there are now more than 50 — and reserve them for migrants who are awaiting deportatio­n.

The rest, such as those requesting asylum or holding regional permits to work or travel in southern Mexico, would have access to the new shelters.

“This proposal speaks to the crisis in Mexico’s immigratio­n system and mainly in the (National Immigratio­n Institute),” said Abbdel Camargo, a researcher at the College of the Southern Border. He said that while details are unclear, he was worried that if the shelters could become recruitmen­t centers for workers rather than humanitari­an shelters for families.

Camargo said the idea appeared to formalize what authoritie­s had already done in moving migrants from the detention center in Tapachula to a fairground­s, which did not have adequate facilities for them.

“This government needs to urgently move from words to deeds,” said Ana Saiz, director of Sin Fronteras, a non-government organizati­on that along with two other groups denounced detention conditions in a report to Mexico’s Senate.

Saiz said that days after that report, the government closed five small immigratio­n detention centers, including one where abuses had been reported.

Guillén said that the institute had fired some 600 employees for reasons including “inadequate conduct, signs of corruption, others for (poor) performanc­e, others for not passing confidence controls...”

But Saiz still has doubts. “There’s a lot of talk about looking for alternativ­es, but the detention centers are full, the massive operations continue. They separate families and even a child lost her life,” she said, referring to a 10-year-old Guatemalan girl who died last week after apparently falling from a bunk in a Mexico City detention center. Her death is under investigat­ion.

The government has denied that it is separating families, but admits it is overwhelme­d.

“The Institute does not have infrastruc­ture for families,” Guillén said. “The (detention centers) have a very severe control model and from the perspectiv­e of children, it’s completely inappropri­ate.” But he said the kids are there because the government decided to keep them with their parents.

The National Human Rights Commission recently denounced confinemen­t conditions and the lack of accurate counts of who was held at the Tapachula facility.

Guillén said the change in approach is needed urgently. But it will take time to build the shelter facilities and the U.S. is entering another election cycle where the threat of harsher measures against migrants could increase.

“This is a transition period,” Guillén said. “I hope that these flows are a stage, a circumstan­ce, a situation and that we find a way to ease the number and improve the (migrants’) treatment quickly.”

 ??  ?? In this 2019 file photo, Rahjit, from India, poses for a photo as he waits with other migrants for a ticket to register their entry into Mexico at an immigratio­n station in Tapachula, Chiapas state, Mexico. AP PHOTO/MOISES CASTILLO
In this 2019 file photo, Rahjit, from India, poses for a photo as he waits with other migrants for a ticket to register their entry into Mexico at an immigratio­n station in Tapachula, Chiapas state, Mexico. AP PHOTO/MOISES CASTILLO

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