The Sun News (Sunday)

Migrants from around world cross border near San Diego

- BY PATRICK J. MCDONNELL

At dawn came a dozen men, women and children from Nepal. Following in the twilight was a cluster of families from Peru, Ecuador and Colombia, along with half a dozen Chinese men.

Behind them were men from India and couples from Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan carrying infants.

Scattered migrants kept arriving at the top of a steep dirt road to surrender to U.S. border agents in order to claim asylum.

“I am finally here, in America,” Justin Agbobli, 30, who had traveled from Togo in West Africa, proclaimed in French. “Today is a dream come true!”

San Diego County has become the most popular spot for migrants illegally entering the United States, according to the latest government figures. With 37,370 arrests last month, it was the busiest of the Border Patrol’s nine sectors along the southern border for the first time since the 1990s.

Driving the numbers is a massive increase in people from countries that usually don’t account for much illegal immigratio­n.

It has long been the case that the majority of migrants arriving along the 2,000-mile border come from Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador. But a dramatic shift has been underway along the 60-mile stretch that makes up the San Diego sector.

Between Oct. 1 and March 31, those four countries accounted for just 20% of the 185,469 apprehensi­ons in the San Diego sector. The other 80% were arrests of people from China, Colombia, Ecuador, Brazil, Turkey, India and a vast array of other faraway places.

The diversity here reflects a massive worldwide movement of people that has been attributed to a variety of factors, including continued economic fallout from the pandemic, rising political repression and increasing ease of internatio­nal travel.

As to why San Diego has become the favored crossing spot on the U.S. border, experts point to a crackdown by Mexican authoritie­s that has made it harder to reach Texas.

Migrants and the smugglers they hire have long sought out the path of least resistance.

That now appears to be San Diego.

On a recent morning in the tiny community of Dulzura, a 36-year-old industrial engineer from Turkey who had just crossed the border from Mexico would give only his first name, Melih.

“You might see me as an invader – and yes, you are right, in a sense, I am invading your country,” he said. “But I am coming to your country to commit no crime. This – crossing the border illegally – is the only crime I have ever committed in my entire life.”

He said he wanted to enter the country to work but was told there was a two-year wait at U.S. consulates in Turkey just to apply for a tourist visa. “Who can wait that long?” he asked before stubbing out a cigarette butt and heading uphill to join the line of some 100 migrants turning themselves in.

THE TEXAS EFFECT

For much of the 1980s and ’90s, San Diego was ground zero for immigratio­n polemics.

“They keep coming,” intoned an inflammato­ry 1994 campaign ad for Republican Gov. Pete

Wilson that included footage of dozens of migrant families charging up Interstate 5 just north of the border.

“Enough is enough,” Wilson declared at the end of the spot.

The furor about illegal immigratio­n resulted in the Clinton administra­tion’s signature Operation Gatekeeper, which militarize­d the border with a frenzy of fence-building, agent deployment­s and installati­ons of sensors, lights and cameras.

Steel walls went up in places where the line once featured stands of repurposed metal sheets designed for makeshift military airstrips in Vietnam.

But more walls didn’t stop people from coming. Instead, the flow shifted east to Arizona and Texas.

Now, a quarter-century later, human traffic along the border is moving west.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott asserts that’s because of his actions – posting National Guard forces and state troopers along the Rio Grande and installing barbed wireand other barriers.

“Our stiff resistance is working,” Abbott wrote on X in February.

Experts said it is possible that talk about the Republican governor’s Operation Lone Star has steered some migrants away from Texas. Word spreads quickly on social media platforms where migrants share travel tips.

But a much bigger factor, experts said, is that Mexico – under pressure from the Biden administra­tion to help curb illegal immigratio­n – has clamped down on migrants hopping on freight trains bound for areas near Texas.

“Mexican authoritie­s have put a lot of pressure on key migration routes to Texas, and that may be forcing people to try other routes further west,” said Cris Ramón, senior adviser on immigratio­n for the Latino civil rights organizati­on UnidosUS. “Migration is a dynamic phenomenon, and people are going to adjust and find the circumstan­ces where they have the best chance to reach the United States.”

Indeed, the total number of apprehensi­ons along the entire border between Oct. 1 and March 31 – slightly exceeding 1 million – was nearly unchanged from the same period a year earlier. That’s because a 29% drop in the Texas sectors was counterbal­anced by a 134% increase in the Tucson sector and a 69% rise in the San Diego sector.

WHERE THEY COME FROM

China: The most dramatic increases in migrant apprehensi­ons in the San Diego sector involve people from China. Between Oct. 1 and March 31, there were 23,890 arrests of Chinese.

That was 18 times the total during the same period a year earlier and accounted for nearly all Chinese migrants detained border-wide.

Increases in arrests were also substantia­l for other countries whose citizens previously accounted for relatively few illegal border crossings.

Ecuador: up 499% to 13,654.

Colombia: up 114% to 35,819.

Brazil: up 622% to 12,698. Turkey: up 88% to 6,786. India: up 331% to 6,560.

Many migrants interviewe­d had flown from Africa, Asia or Europe to South America and trekked north through the Darién Gap, a 60-mile stretch of dense rainforest between Colombia and Panama. Getting people across the gap has become big business in recent years, boosting its allure as a conduit to United States. Last year it drew more than 500,000 migrants.

Others avoided the Darién, flying from Colombia to Central America or directly to Mexico, then made their way to Tijuana, which has an extensive infrastruc­ture that caters to migrants.

“Why do people come to Tijuana and San Diego? It’s very simple,” said Rafael Fernández de Castro, who heads the Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies at the University of California, San Diego. “Because Tijuana is the border city best equipped to receive migrants, where there are more shelters, more hotels, a major airport, more coyotes, more business – all the good and the bad we have in Tijuana.”

Once they cross the border, most migrants these days don’t run from the Border Patrol. They seek out agents to give themselves up to claim asylum – and eventually have a chance at legal residency in the United States. Many are unaware that a Biden administra­tion policy change last year means that people who cross illegally are presumed ineligible for asylum.

On a recent morning, more than 100 men from Africa, Asia, the Middle East and South America huddled near a campfire at a rough camp within view of passing traffic on Interstate 8 outside the California high-desert community of Jacumba Hot Springs, an hour’s drive east of San Diego. Border Patrol agents had swung by the camp at dawn and picked up parents with children, but not single men, the stranded migrants said.

 ?? ROBERT GAUTHIER TNS ?? Chinese migrant Zhen Jiang and his family receive direction from a Border Patrol agent hours after crossing near Jacumba Hot Springs, California, on May 12. San Diego County has become the most popular spot for migrants illegally entering the United States.
ROBERT GAUTHIER TNS Chinese migrant Zhen Jiang and his family receive direction from a Border Patrol agent hours after crossing near Jacumba Hot Springs, California, on May 12. San Diego County has become the most popular spot for migrants illegally entering the United States.

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