San Diego Union-Tribune

COURT REJECTS PUSH TO KEEP ASYLUM LIMITS

Group of 19 states objected to ending Title 42 restrictio­ns

- BY GIOVANNA DELL’ORTO & REBECCA SANTANA Dell’orto and Santana write for The Associated Press.

An appeals court on Friday rejected efforts by conservati­ve states to maintain Trump-era asylum restrictio­ns on immigrants seeking asylum.

With the limits set to expire next week, thousands of migrants packed shelters on Mexico’s border. The ruling from the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals means the restrictio­ns remained on track to expire Wednesday, unless further appeals are filed.

A coalition of 19 Republican-leaning states were pushing to keep the asylum restrictio­ns that former President Donald Trump put in place at the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Migrants have been denied rights to seek asylum under U.S. and internatio­nal law 2.5 million times since March 2020 on grounds of preventing the spread of COVID-19. The public-health rule known as Title 42 has left some migrants biding time in Mexico.

Advocates for immigrants had argued that the U.S. was abandoning its longstandi­ng history and commitment­s to offer refuge to people around the world fleeing persecutio­n, and sued to end the use of Title 42. They’ve also argued the restrictio­ns were a pretext by Trump for restrictin­g migration, and in any case, vaccines and other treatments make that argument outdated.

A judge last month sided with them and set Wednesday as the deadline for the federal government to end the practice. Conservati­ves states trying to keep Title 42 in place had been pushing to intervene in the case and delay the lifting of the pandemic-era restrictio­ns. But a three-judge panel on Friday night rejected their efforts, saying the states had waited too long to try to intervene in the case. Louisiana’s attorney general expressed disappoint­ment with the decision and said the states would appeal to the Supreme Court.

Ahead of the upcoming deadline, illegal border crossings of single adults dipped in November, according to a Justice Department

court filing released Friday, though it gave no explanatio­n for why. It also did not account for families traveling with young children and children traveling alone.

Border cities, most notably El Paso, Texas, are facing a daily influx of migrants that the Biden administra­tion expects to grow if asylum restrictio­ns are lifted.

Tijuana, the largest Mexican border city, has an estimated 5,000 people in more than 30 shelters, Enrique Lucero, the city’s director of migrant affairs, said this week.

In Reynosa, Mexico, near McAllen, Texas, nearly 300 migrants — mostly families — crammed into the Casa del Migrante, sleeping on bunk beds and even on the floor.

Rose, a 32-year-old from Haiti, has been in the shelter for three weeks with her daughter and 1-year-old son. Rose, who did not provide her last name because she fears it could jeopardize her safety and her attempts to seek asylum, said she learned on her journey of possible changes to U.S. policies. She said she was happy to wait a little longer in Mexico for the lifting of restrictio­ns that were enacted at the outset of the pandemic and that have become a cornerston­e of U.S. border enforcemen­t.

“We’re very scared, because the Haitians are deported,” said Rose, who is worried any mistakes in trying to get her family to the U.S. could get her sent back to Haiti.

Inside Senda de Vida 2, a Reynosa shelter opened by an evangelica­l Christian pastor when his first one reached capacity, about 3,000 migrants are living in tents pitched on concrete slabs and rough gravel. Flies swarm everywhere under a hot sun beating down even in mid-December.

For the many fleeing violence in Haiti, Venezuela and elsewhere, such shelters offer at least some safety from the cartels that control passage through the Rio Grande and prey on migrants.

In McAllen, about 100 migrants who avoided asylum restrictio­ns rested on floor mats Thursday in a large hall run by Catholic Charities, waiting for transporta­tion to families and friends across the United States.

Gloria, a 22-year-old from Honduras who is eight months pregnant with her first child, held onto a printed sheet that read: “Please help me. I do not speak English.” Gloria also did not want her last name used out of fears for her safety. She expressed concerns about navigating the airport alone and making it to Florida, where she has a family acquaintan­ce.

Andrea Rudnik, cofounder of an all-volunteer migrant welcome associatio­n in Brownsvill­e, Texas, across the border from Matamoros, Mexico, was worried about having enough winter coats for migrants coming from warmer climates.

“We don’t have enough supplies,” she said Friday, noting that donations to Team Brownsvill­e are down.

Title 42, which is part of a 1944 public health law, applies to all nationalit­ies but has fallen unevenly on those whom Mexico agrees to take back — Guatemalan­s, Hondurans, El Salvadoran­s and, more recently, Venezuelan­s, in addition to Mexicans.

According to the Justice Department’s Friday court filing, Border Patrol agents stopped single adults 143,903 times along the Mexican border in November, down 9 percent from 158,639 times in October and the lowest level since August. Nicaraguan­s became the second-largest nationalit­y at the border among single adults after Mexicans, surpassing Cubans.

Venezuelan single adults were stopped 3,513 times by Border Patrol agents in November, plunging from 14,697 a month earlier, demonstrat­ing the impact of Mexico’s decision on Oct. 12 to accept migrants from the South American country who are expelled from the U.S.

Mexican single adults were stopped 43,504 times, down from 56,088 times in October, more than any other nationalit­y. Nicaraguan adults were stopped 27,369 times, up from 16,497. Cuban adults were stopped 24,690 times, up from 20,744.

In a related developmen­t, a federal judge in Amarillo, Texas, ruled Thursday that the Biden administra­tion wrongly ended a Trump-era policy to make asylum seekers wait in Mexico for hearings in U.S. immigratio­n court. The ruling had no immediate impact but could prove a longer-term setback for the White House.

 ?? CHRISTIAN CHAVEZ AP ?? Thousands of migrants in cities like Ciudad Juarez are waiting in Mexico for the expiration of Title 42 restrictio­ns so they can seek asylum in the U.S.
CHRISTIAN CHAVEZ AP Thousands of migrants in cities like Ciudad Juarez are waiting in Mexico for the expiration of Title 42 restrictio­ns so they can seek asylum in the U.S.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States