The Guardian (USA)

US asylum app strands migrants and aids organised crime, rights group says

- Thomas Graham in Mexico City

A US government smartphone app that tightly limits asylum appointmen­ts at the US-Mexico border is stranding vulnerable migrants in Mexico and enriching organised crime groups, according to a new report from Human Rights Watch (HRW).

The report, which draws on interviews with more than 100 migrants, as well as officials and activists, documents how the CBP One app – which is all but mandatory for asylum seekers – offers 1,450 appointmen­ts a day, when arrivals at the border averaged 7,240 a day between May 2023 and January 2024.

This “digital metering” means that asylum seekers must either wait for an appointmen­t or resort to paying human traffickin­g groups to help them cross the border between ports of entry.

“The Biden administra­tion claims that its asylum rule and effectivel­y mandatory use of CBP One will disrupt smuggling networks,” said the report. “Human Rights Watch has observed that, on the contrary, digital metering in Mexico leaves asylum seekers vulnerable to extortion, kidnapping, and violence.

“And, with no other way to access protection, asylum seekers are more likely to engage smugglers, further enriching criminal cartels,” added the report.

The CBP One app became a requiremen­t for asylum seekers in May 2023, as the US prepared to lift Title 42, a pandemic-era restrictio­n on immigratio­n, and anticipate­d a sharp rise in arrivals at the border.

That uptick in arrivals never materialis­ed – but CBP One was neverthele­ss maintained.

There are certain exceptions to the requiremen­t of a CBP One appointmen­t, including those who can show “an imminent threat of rape, kidnapping, torture, or murder”, or “a severe form of traffickin­g in persons”.

However, HRW investigat­ors document instances of asylum seekers being turned away despite describing how they face such threats in Mexico.

Rather than wait for an appointmen­t in Mexico, many try to cross the border between ports of entry. Some drown in the Rio Grande river, while others die of dehydratio­n in the Sonoran desert.

According to CBP data, 895 people died at the border during the 2022 fiscal year, the last year for which data has been released. That marked a 57% increase on 2021. Local organisati­ons say it undercount­s the true number.

Those who choose to wait for an appointmen­t may spend months at risk of kidnap from organised crime groups.

“It’s systematic,” said Ari Sawyer, a researcher at HRW. “They kidnap them, put their phones on airplane mode, take photos of them and their documents, then go through their contacts and call US numbers until they find relatives they can extort for dollars.”

One person interviewe­d by HRW described being kidnapped in the state of Durango and seeing perhaps 150 others in the stash house where he was held. Another, who was kidnapped in Mexicali, said he saw two people shot and killed when they resisted.

Human Rights First, a human rights organisati­on, documented 13,480 publicly reported cases of kidnapping and other violent attacks on migrants during the Biden administra­tion up to December 2022.

Rather than offering protection, Mexican officials sometimes collude with organised crime.

In one case, the mayor and chief of police in Matehuala, a city in the state of San Luis Potosí, were arrested for their part in a migrant kidnapping ring.

Officials also frequently force people on to buses that take them back south in Mexico – an informal policy that has been expanded during the presidency of Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

“These people have crossed Central America, they’ve gotten through Mexico, they’re waiting for a CBP One appointmen­t – and then Mexican immigratio­n sweeps them up, puts them on a bus, and forcibly transports them to the border with Guatemala,” said Sawyer.

This is part of Mexico’s role as US immigratio­n enforcer, tasked with reducing arrivals at the border.

Last year, the official number of detentions of migrants soared to 800,000. The first three months of 2024 have already seen almost 400,000.

When migrants are detained in Mexico, it is unclear what processes are being followed to determine how long they are held for, where they are released, and whether they are repatriate­d. But the longer they spend in Mexico, the greater the risks they run.

“An app-based appointmen­t system suggests the illusion of order and impartiali­ty, but in reality CBP One puts people in danger and means more profit and power for criminal cartels,” said Sawyer. “The United States and Mexico can and should do better.”

 ?? Photograph: Hérika Martínez/AFP/Getty Images ?? Tthe CBP One app offers 1,450 appointmen­ts a day, when arrivals at the border averaged 7,240 a day between May 2023 and January 2024.
Photograph: Hérika Martínez/AFP/Getty Images Tthe CBP One app offers 1,450 appointmen­ts a day, when arrivals at the border averaged 7,240 a day between May 2023 and January 2024.

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