Los Angeles Times

Appointmen­ts canceled along Mexican border

- By Kate Morrissey Morrissey writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Officials say capacity issues at the San Ysidro Port of Entry are preventing asylum seekers from being accepted.

SAN DIEGO — Customs and Border Protection officers in San Diego are canceling appointmen­ts meant to allow particular­ly vulnerable asylum seekers into the United States while pandemic border policies continue to limit who can enter the country.

For some migrants who were initially scheduled to enter the United States last week, the last-minute changes have meant scrambles to find new housing and money for food in Tijuana and have even thrust some into dangerous situations that they might have otherwise avoided.

When asked about the cancellati­ons, CBP officials pointed to a capacity issue at the San Ysidro Port of Entry from a week earlier but declined to elaborate further.

The program to set appointmen­ts for certain asylum seekers is the result of a temporary agreement between the federal government and the American Civil Liberties Union in a lawsuit challengin­g the legality of a border policy that began under the Trump administra­tion during the pandemic and continued under President Biden.

That policy, known as Title 42, allows border officials to immediatel­y expel asylum seekers and other migrants to Mexico or their countries of origin. In negotiatio­n with the ACLU, the federal government is allowing nonprofits to identify particular­ly vulnerable asylum seekers who are in danger where they are waiting in Mexico because of threats, medical conditions or other urgent issues.

Once their requests for Title 42 exemption are approved, those asylum seekers

are given dates and times to go into the United States at ports of entry. At San Ysidro, groups of asylum seekers have been entering in the morning and afternoon on most days.

Hollie Webb, lead attorney for the Border Rights Project with Al Otro Lado, a nonprofit that supports asylum seekers in Tijuana, said that many of her clients have ended up homeless because of the cancellati­ons last week.

“CBP’s casual cruelty — telling people that they would finally be able to sleep safely then taking it away at the last minute — has managed to put people who were already highly vulnerable into even more precarious situations,” Webb said. “Any alleged capacity issues that CBP may have had could have been addressed and communicat­ed in a way that didn’t leave dozens of people sleeping on the streets of Tijuana.”

Initially, a CBP official said the agency hoped to be back on track by Thursday,

but some of Al Otro Lado’s clients who were scheduled to present at the border over the weekend were told their appointmen­ts were also canceled. CBP officials did not respond to a follow-up request from the San Diego Union-Tribune about the timeline for resuming the program.

“Lives are at stake, so we hope the government will immediatel­y restore humanitari­an exemptions at San Ysidro and will continue pressing the government to do so,” said Lee Gelernt, lead attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union.

One woman from Honduras whose family was initially scheduled to enter Saturday worried about how she would be able to afford diapers for her baby since her husband had already quit his job in anticipati­on of their appointmen­t.

She had already told her landlord they would be leaving Saturday. Now he wants them to pay August rent in order to stay longer.

“We don’t know still what will happen,” the woman said in Spanish, asking that her name not be used. “It’s really difficult.”

She also worries about her oldest daughter, age 12, because the girl was already nearly kidnapped in Tijuana. She hears stories frequently about children in the neighborho­od where they’re living disappeari­ng and later being found dead.

Her daughter has stopped going outside altogether, the woman said.

“She stays locked in because it makes her afraid,” she said. “She doesn’t even go with me to the store. She has a lot of fear.”

A 40-year-old man from Haiti named Jimmy was supposed to cross at the beginning of last week. But that same night after he was sent back from the port of entry because of the cancellati­ons, he said, a group of about 20 people carrying guns and machetes broke down his door and told him to leave. He fled with his nephew, who has a disability.

When he returned, he found that the robbers took everything from his home.

“I don’t have nothing, nothing, nothing,” said the man, who asked that only his first name be used. “I don’t have any clothes. I’ve just got $20 with my passport. That’s all they didn’t get.”

He has already received a new date to go to the port of entry — a full month after his previous one. Afraid to stay at home, he has been living with a friend for a few days, but that friend told him that he would have to leave by Saturday.

“I’m really scared. I just want to change the situation. That’s what I need,” Jimmy said. “I don’t have any place to go.”

 ?? Mario Tama Getty Images ?? MEXICAN SOLDIERS walk by a camp of asylum seekers on the Tijuana side of the San Ysidro Port of Entry. About 2,000 migrants are waiting at the camp.
Mario Tama Getty Images MEXICAN SOLDIERS walk by a camp of asylum seekers on the Tijuana side of the San Ysidro Port of Entry. About 2,000 migrants are waiting at the camp.

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