San Francisco Chronicle

Numbers swell of those waiting to cross border

- By Elliot Spagat Elliot Spagat is an Associated Press writer.

TIJUANA — The Cameroonia­n men who share 10 mattresses on the floor of a thirdfloor apartment above a barber shop walk every morning to the busiest U.S. border crossing with Mexico, hoping against all odds that it will be their lucky day to claim asylum in the United States. Their unlikely bet is that a sympatheti­c Mexican official will somehow find a spot for them.

“I go because if they open up, I’m in,” said Rashidou Hdzekasaah, 35, who has been idled in Tijuana for two months and still has more than 6,000 names ahead of him on a waiting list to claim asylum at the San Diego crossing.

Englishspe­aking Cameroonia­ns fleeing atrocities of their Frenchspea­king government helped push Tijuana’s asylum wait list to 10,000 on Sunday, up from 4,800 just three months earlier. At the same time, the U.S. is returning more Central Americans to Mexico to wait for dates in U.S. immigratio­n court, putting asylum seekers in an unexpected, prolonged period of uncertaint­y.

Based on Mexican government figures and reporting by the Associated Press, at least 40,000 migrants who have reached the U.S. border with Mexico are on a waiting list for an initial attempt to seek asylum or waiting for a court hearing in the U.S. after being sent back.

The figure represents a dramatic increase from earlier in the year. It is unknown how many have entered the U.S. illegally, decided to settle in Mexico or gone back to Central America.

The long waits are testing the patience of some asylum seekers and residents in border cities.

More than 100 Cameroonia­ns blocked the path of the government immigratio­n vans last month, demanding more transparen­cy about who gets accepted from the wait list to request asylum. It came after several days on which the U.S. accepted no claims. People getting called now have been in Tijuana about 3½ months, but the wait is expected to lengthen.

Turning Mexico into a waiting room for U.S. asylum seekers may be the Trump administra­tion’s most forceful response yet to a surge of migrants seeking humanitari­an protection, many of them Central American families. The effort is part of a broader crackdown on immigratio­n, subject of a polarizing debate that became even more pitched after the discovery of an antiimmigr­ant screed tied to a man charged with killing 22 people in El Paso, Texas, Saturday.

Mexico, responding to President Trump’s threat to raise tariffs, agreed in June to rapid expansion of a new U.S. policy to make asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their cases wind through clogged U.S. courts. The number of people returned nearly doubled in the following month, hitting 19,911 on July 11, according to the Mexican government’s latest published figures.

Many others haven’t even reached the first step toward asylum. Lines began to swell last year when the Trump administra­tion limited the number of cases it accepts each day for processing, leaving it to Mexican agencies, volunteers, nonprofit organizati­ons and immigrants themselves to decide who fills available slots.

 ?? Elliot Spagat / Associated Press ?? African men are among a group of migrants in Tijuana listening to numbers being called for people to claim asylum in the U.S. Some immigrants have been stuck at the border for months.
Elliot Spagat / Associated Press African men are among a group of migrants in Tijuana listening to numbers being called for people to claim asylum in the U.S. Some immigrants have been stuck at the border for months.

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