Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

‘Desperatio­n’ pushes migrants into deadly terrain

- By Simon Romero and Caitlin Dickerson

ANTELOPE WELLS, N.M. — The Border Patrol’s tiny base in the southwest corner of New Mexico is so remote that the wind howls through the surroundin­g basin where mountain lions still stalk their prey.

But that hasn’t stopped thousands of Central Americans from journeying in recent weeks to the rural outpost and other isolated points along the Southwest border, launching increasing­ly desperate bids for asylum in the United States.

In a two-day span in January, 362 migrants surrendere­d to the Border Patrol in Antelope Wells, overwhelmi­ng the small base’s capacity to process asylum requests. Two weeks ago, a new group of 306 migrants arrived at the same location, including children in need of immediate medical care — a situation officials in New Mexico say is without precedent.

Prompting these trips to ever-more-remote border locations are not only the nearly 700 miles of border wall and fencing built since 2006, but the Trump administra­tion’s increasing­ly rigid immigratio­n policies aimed at deterring the flow of migrant families, mostly from Central America, that have streamed in from Mexico since 2014.

Over the past year, the government has limited the number of asylum seekers who are allowed to present their cases each day at certain ports of entry, stationed agents on bridges to turn asylum seekers away and launched tear gas at migrants attempting to cross the border near San Diego.

The administra­tion went even further two weeks ago, announcing that it would start requiring some asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their applicatio­ns are processed, which can take years. Officials plan to implement the new policy at the San Ysidro border crossing near San Diego before expanding it to crossings in Arizona, New Mexico and Texas.

Taken together, these moves effectivel­y have forced some Central American migrants to wait for months to apply for asylum, sometimes sleeping on the street or in crowded shelters in Mexican border cities.

Frustrated and increasing­ly desperate, thousands of families have lately been opting to pay smugglers to take them to remote border stations where they can surrender quickly to American officials and hope to be allowed to remain in the United States while their asylum claims are processed.

In December, which saw a record number of families arriving at the border, 27,518 migrants traveling in families were apprehende­d in areas outside normal border stations. The El Paso sector, which includes the suddenly busy area of rural New Mexico, saw a 1,866 percent increase in family apprehensi­ons during October and November 2018, compared with the same period a year earlier.

Pushing migrants toward remote desert locations puts them at higher risk of dehydratio­n, heatstroke or hypothermi­a. Most are choosing the more dangerous crossing routes because they have been foreclosed from seeking asylum at the more widely traveled border crossings, said Fernando Garcia, director of the Border Network for Human Rights in El Paso. “How else to explain the desperatio­n of thousands of people making it to the middle of nowhere just so they can surrender to Border Patrol?”

Trump administra­tion officials have argued that the new policies are an attempt to discourage migrants from even attempting the dangerous trips through Mexico where they are especially vulnerable to extortion and human traffickin­g. Officials contend that existing legislatio­n encourages parents to bring children along on the journey.

Katie Waldman, a spokeswoma­n for the Department of Homeland Security, laid blame on the federal government having to comply with the Flores agreement, a 1997 legal settlement aimed at preventing lengthy detentions of migrant children, and subsequent legislatio­n codifying parts of the settlement into federal law.

“We continue to call on Congress to address this humanitari­an and security crisis that entices smugglers to bring families across the border,” Ms. Waldman said.

Border Patrol officials have put forward various theories about why crossings at remote locations are climbing that have nothing to do with the administra­tion’s policies. Kevin McAleenan, commission­er of Customs and Border Protection, said in a conference call with reporters in December that smugglers could be trying to hold down the transit fees they pay to other criminal organizati­ons with sway in northern Mexico by dropping migrants near remote locations like Antelope Wells.

In an interview in El Paso, Jose Romero, a supervisor­y agent in the Border Patrol’s sector that oversees operations in New Mexico, offered another explanatio­n, claiming that Mexican cannabis smugglers were trying to distract agents in the field by flooding remote stations with asylum seekers.

“Our adversary is no idiot,” Mr. Romero said, adding that while agents were arresting 247 migrants in Antelope Wells one January day, trafficker­s were trying to smuggle hundreds of pounds of marijuana across the border in another location. “Now they know where our weak spots are,” he said.

The administra­tion has not been unmindful of the hazards of migrants venturing into little-traveled regions. Partly in an attempt to deter such crossings and what government officials describe as “meritless” asylum claims, the administra­tion tried last year to refuse to accept asylum applicatio­ns from anyone who had not entered the country at a legal border crossing, but that policy was blocked by the courts. And Antelope Wells, though remote, is a legal border crossing.

Just how dangerous such crossings are became apparent in December, when Jakelin Caal Maquin, a 7-year-old girl from Guatemala, died in United States custody after she and her father crossed the border in a group of 163 migrants that surrendere­d to agents at Antelope Wells. Only a few weeks later, an 8year-old boy from Guatemala, Felipe Gómez Alonzo, died after crossing the border about 3 miles west of the Paso Del Norte port of entry in El Paso.

But the numbers have only continued to grow. Since the start of the 2019 fiscal year, the Border Patrol said, it has found at least 24 groups of 100 or more migrants that had crossed around the Bootheel, the sparsely populated area where New Mexico’s border with Mexico dips southward like a cowboy boot’s heel.

At the end of a 45-mile road from the decaying hamlet of Hachita that runs through grazing lands dotted with creosote bushes, the Border Patrol has maintained a small presence at Antelope Wells for decades. A sign says the base is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The population of Antelope Wells, once 2, sometimes soars all the way into the high single digits when more than a handful of agents are deployed here for weeklong assignment­s.

 ?? Jerry Lara/The San Antonio Express-News via AP ?? Six-year-old Daniela Fernanda Portillo Burgos sits on the shoulders of her mother, Iris Jamilet, 39, as they look out through the fence of a immigrant shelter Tuesday in Piedras Negras, Mexico.
Jerry Lara/The San Antonio Express-News via AP Six-year-old Daniela Fernanda Portillo Burgos sits on the shoulders of her mother, Iris Jamilet, 39, as they look out through the fence of a immigrant shelter Tuesday in Piedras Negras, Mexico.

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