Post Tribune (Sunday)

With more border crossers, US groups try to stem deaths

- By Eugene Garcia and Adriana Gomez Licon

FALFURRIAS, Texas — Every week, migrant rights activist Eduardo Canales fills blue water drums that are spread throughout a vast valley of Texas ranchlands and brush. They are there for migrants who venture into the rough terrain to avoid being caught and sent back to Mexico.

The stretch of land 70 miles north of the U.S.-Mexico border is dangerous, and many have died. But some migrants — usually single adults — are willing to take the risk, walking through the shrub-invaded grasslands on the sprawling ranches, seeking dirt paths to circumvent a U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint on a major highway where agents verify people’s immigratio­n status.

“People die here. People get lost. People are never heard of again. They go missing,” said Canales, director of the South Texas Human Rights Center.

The Biden administra­tion is dealing with a growing number of single adult migrants crossing the border; they made up nearly two of every three encounters in April. This elusive group is less likely to surrender to U.S. authoritie­s to seek asylum than families and children, often choosing risky routes away from Border Patrol checkpoint­s and intake sites, where agents process families and children traveling alone.

Of the Border Patrol’s 173,460 total encounters with migrants last month, 108,301 were single adults, with more than half of them Mexican. The numbers were the highest since April 2000, but most were quickly expelled from the country under federal pandemic-related powers invoked last year by then-President Donald Trump and kept in place by President Joe Biden.

Unlike deportatio­ns, expulsions carry no legal consequenc­es, and many migrants try crossing multiple times. The Border Patrol says 29% of people expelled in April had been expelled before.

In Brooks County in the Rio Grande Valley, the busiest corridor for illegal crossings, local officials have recovered 40 bodies of migrants in the brush this year. In all of 2020, they found 34 bodies.

The Border Patrol keeps its own statistics, which tend to be lower than those tracked by aid groups and local officials because it only counts the remains of migrants it comes across.

While agents try to count how many people avoid apprehensi­on, it’s difficult to do in the Rio Grande Valley. Its often thick brush has traditiona­lly not had many sensors. The Border Patrol’s most trusted method of counting how many people get away relies on observing tiny human traces, such as dusty footprints, torn cobwebs or broken twigs.

This month, a woman near Van Horn, Texas, felt she was close to dying because of a lack of water but was able to call an aid group tied to Canales that alerted officials. They were able to trace the coordinate­s to the call and find her.

“Some don’t even make it. They die of lack of water, food, health, collapse and stay there until somebody stumbles upon their bodies, and that’s when they call us to pick them up,” said Brooks County sheriff ’s Patrol Deputy Roberto Castanon.

Canales’ aid group and others have worked to build trust with the community of ranchers to get access to some of this land along the path north of the border.

“People have a humanitari­an nature in them. They may have very conservati­ve politics, but they don’t want to see people die,” Canales said.

The advocate compared the region full of ranches with the desert in Arizona, where deaths of migrants have long been a problem. Last summer’s record heat and dry weather in Arizona were the main causes behind the 227 deaths counted by a migrant aid group, the highest in a decade.

 ?? GREGORY BULL/AP ?? Migrant rights activist Eduardo Canales carries jugs of water to a water drop this month in Falfurrias, Texas. The water is for migrants who enter the region.
GREGORY BULL/AP Migrant rights activist Eduardo Canales carries jugs of water to a water drop this month in Falfurrias, Texas. The water is for migrants who enter the region.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States