Lodi News-Sentinel

Plans for migrant shelter in Mexicali gets sidelined

- By Wendy Fry

SAN DIEGO — Plans to open a federal shelter for migrants in Mexicali have stalled after neighbors vehemently protested and successful­ly convinced Baja California’s new governor to shelve it.

According to human rights workers on both sides of the border, the change calls into question what Mexico is actually doing to protect asylum-seekers returned to border regions under a program called the Migrant Protection Protocols.

Baja California Gov. Jaime Bonilla told the Union-Tribune last week the federal shelter might not open at all because residents are opposed to it and because “it might not be needed.”

Human rights advocates say a lack of public support and no government oversight of private shelters in Mexicali have caused dangerous living conditions for asylumseek­ers that allows shelters to exploit the vulnerable people they are meant to protect.

The majority of residents in the neighborho­od in central Mexicali where the federal shelter was slated to open said Thursday they are adamantly opposed to it. A few people who work or go to the gym near the location said they supported the idea.

Margarita Rubio, 53, has lived in the Conjunto Urbano Universita­rio neighborho­od in Mexicali for 20 years. Her home on Avenida Bachillere­s is one street north from the planned shelter site, which is a shuttered grocery store.

“We already have enough problems with the high crime that is here. We don’t need other types of problems that will come with this magnitude of people,” said Rubio, adding that her specific neighborho­od is very quiet and tranquil, but she said the region, in general, is struggling.

Rubio said she understand­s the majority are fleeing violence in their home countries, but pointed out that Mexico has many migrants who come north to Baja California for the same reasons.

“The majority are looking for better lives. It is understand­able. In fact, even from here, from the same country, Mexico, they also come here,” she said.

Carlos Alberto Flores, 25, who goes to the gym at the Ultra Fitness Gym on Calle Heroico Colegio Militar next door to the site for the planned shelter said he thinks the neighbors are over-reacting.

“I think everyone deserves an opportunit­y, especially when they arrive in a new place. The majority come here to work,” said Flores, who said, unlike the many of his neighbors, he didn’t believe the migrants would cause problems.

“If they cause problems, then they can just take the individual­s who do out of here,” said Flores.

In October, nearly 200 people protested outside the now empty building where the federal government was slated to open the shelter on Nov. 1. The building was a former Soriana grocery store that is now shuttered.

At the protest, children and adults waved yellow “No Albergue” (“No Shelter”) signs, chanting “No to the shelter” and “We don’t want it,” according to neighbors who attended and posted videos to Facebook and The Desert Sun.

The shelter was planned as a response to shifts in U.S. immigratio­n policy under the Trump administra­tion, specifical­ly for migrants who have been returned to Mexicali under the United States’ “Remain in Mexico” program, also known as “Migrant Protection Protocols” or “MPP.”

Under the program, migrants are sent back to Mexico to await the outcomes of their U.S. asylum cases.

Human rights workers and attorneys dispute the U.S. government’s name for the program because they say it gives the false impression that migrants are being protected in Mexico. Instead, some call it the “Migrant Persecutio­n Protocols.”

 ?? EDUARDO CONTRERAS/SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE ?? Members of the Mexican government organizati­on called Grupo Beta (man with Mexican flag on shoulder) oversee and administer the process of migrants seeking asylum in the U.S. on April 18 during a morning gathering at the El Chaparral plaza in Tijuana, Mexico.
EDUARDO CONTRERAS/SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE Members of the Mexican government organizati­on called Grupo Beta (man with Mexican flag on shoulder) oversee and administer the process of migrants seeking asylum in the U.S. on April 18 during a morning gathering at the El Chaparral plaza in Tijuana, Mexico.

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