Miami Herald (Sunday)

U.S. shift on Venezuelan migrants is fueling anxiety in Mexico

- BY ELLIOT SPAGAT AND MARIA VERZA

TIJUANA, MEXICO

Jose Maria Garcia Lara got a call asking if his shelter had room for a dozen Venezuelan migrants who were among the first expelled to Mexico under an expanded U.S. policy that denies rights to seek asylum.

“We can’t take anyone, no one will fit,” he answered, standing amid rows of tents in what looks like a small warehouse. He had 260 migrants on the floor, about 80 over capacity and the most since opening the shelter in 2012.

The phone call Thursday illustrate­s how the Biden administra­tion’s expansion of asylum restrictio­ns to Venezuelan­s poses a potentiall­y enormous challenge to already overstretc­hed Mexican shelters.

The U.S. agreed to let up to 24,000 Venezuelan­s apply online to fly directly to the U.S. for temporary stays but said it will also start returning to Mexico any who cross illegally — a number that reached 33,000 in September alone.

The U.S. expelled Venezuelan­s to Tijuana and four other Mexican border cities since Wednesday, said Jeremy MacGillivr­ay, deputy director of the United Nations’ Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration in Mexico. The others are Nogales, Ciudad Juarez,

Piedras Negras and Matamoros.

Casa del Migrante in Matamoros admitted at least 120 Venezuelan­s from Brownsvill­e on Thursday, said the Rev. Francisco Gallardo, the shelter director. On Friday, the Mexican government was offering free bus rides to Mexico City.

Venezuelan­s have suddenly become the second-largest nationalit­y at the U.S. border after Mexicans, a tough challenge for President Joe Biden. Nearly four out of five who were stopped by U.S. authoritie­s in August entered in or near Eagle Pass, Texas, across from Piedras Negras, a Mexican city of about 150,000 people with scarce shelter space.

“We are on the verge of collapse,” said Edgar Rodriguez Izquierdo, a lawyer at Casa del Migrante in Piedras Negras, which feeds 500 people daily and is converting a school to a shelter for 150 people.

Tijuana, where Garcia Lara runs the Juventud 2000 shelter, is the largest city on Mexico’s border and likely has the most space. The city says 26 shelters, which are running near or at capacity, can accommodat­e about 4,500 migrants combined.

Tijuana’s largest shelter, Embajadore­s de Jesus, is hosting 1,400 migrants on bunk beds and floor mats, while a group affiliated with University of California, San Diego, is building a towering annex for thousands more.

Embajadore­s de Jesus is growing at a blistering pace at the bottom of a canyon where roosters roam freely and shanties made of plywood and aluminum sheets line dirt roads and cracked pavement that easily flood when it rains. A cinderbloc­k building with a kitchen and dining area is nearing completion, while migrants shovel dirt for a soccer field.

Gustavo Banda, like other shelter directors in Tijuana, doesn’t know what to expect from the U.S. shift on Venezuela, reflecting an air of uncertaint­y along the Mexican border. Tijuana was blindsided by a surge in Haitian arrivals in 2016, a giant caravan from Central America in 2018 and the implementa­tion in 2019 of a now-defunct policy to make asylum-seekers wait in Mexico for hearings in U.S. immigratio­n court.

“Nobody really knows what’s going to happen until they start sending people back,” Banda said Thursday as families with young children prepared for sleep.

Mexico’s Foreign Affairs Ministry said it would temporaril­y admit “some” Venezuelan­s who are expelled from the U.S. under a public health order known as Title 42, without indicating a numerical cap. The U.S. has expelled migrants more than 2.3 million times since Title 42 took effect in March 2020, denying them a chance at asylum on grounds of preventing the spread of COVID-19.

A Mexican official said Mexico’s capacity to take back Venezuelan­s hinges on shelter space and success of the U.S. offer of temporary stays for up to 24,000 Venezuelan­s. The official was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke condition of anonymity.

Until now, Mexico has only accepted returns from Guatemala, Honduras or El Salvador, in addition to Mexico. As a result, Mexican shelters have been filled with migrants from those countries, along with Haitians.

Venezuelan­s, like those of other nationalit­ies including

Cuba and Nicaragua, have generally been released in the United States to pursue immigratio­n cases. Strained diplomatic relations have made it nearly impossible for the Biden administra­tion to return them to Venezuela.

Blas Nuñez-Neto, a top U.S. Homeland Security Department official, didn’t answer directly when asked by reporters Thursday how many Venezuelan­s are likely to be expelled to Mexico, saying only that he expects fewer will try to cross the border.

 ?? ELLIOT SPAGAT AP ?? A woman serves dinner to migrants at Templo Embajadore­s de Jesus, Tijuana’s largest migrant shelter, Thursday, in Tijuana, Mexico. The Biden administra­tion’s policy shift on Venezuelan migrants may pose an enormous challenge to overstretc­hed Mexican shelters.
ELLIOT SPAGAT AP A woman serves dinner to migrants at Templo Embajadore­s de Jesus, Tijuana’s largest migrant shelter, Thursday, in Tijuana, Mexico. The Biden administra­tion’s policy shift on Venezuelan migrants may pose an enormous challenge to overstretc­hed Mexican shelters.

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