Migrants: U.S. extends pandemic asylum limits

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The U.S. government has extended a pandemic-era policy that has largely prevented migrants in Mexico from seeking asylum in the United States for over two years.

An eleventh-hour decision by a federal judge in Louisiana on Friday made it impossible for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to end the sweeping policy known as Title 42.

Since March 2020, Title 42 has empowered U.S. agents to quickly turn back over a million migrants to Mexico and other countries.

Tens of thousands of migrants have been waiting in Mexico, often for months, for the end of the policy. The CDC had said vaccines and other tools made it no longer necessary to help control the spread of COVID-19 in crowded border facilities.

“The border is totally saturated, the shelter’s pastor, Hector Silva said.

He estimated that some 6,000 migrant families were living on the streets of the violent city, at risk of extortion, kidnapping, and sexual violence by gangs and organized crime groups.

U.S President Joe Biden, a Democrat, came into office in January 2021 promising to undo the hardline immigration policies of his Republican predecessor Donald Trump. So far he has struggled to keep campaign promises to change the system.

Republicans seeking to win control of Congress in November have blasted his border policies as too lenient, pointing to record high migrant crossings, while some members of his own party have criticized him for failing to end Trump-era restrictions.

Migrants protest

On Sunday night, migrants protested and held a vigil at the base of the international bridge in Tijuana, holding banners reading “Defend asylum” and “No more Title 42.”

“I’m so angry,” said Veronica Lopez, who joined the demonstration to protest the U.S. government’s about-face.

Lopez fled her hometown in southwestern Mexico with her daughter this month. She said she had been attacked and raped by her former partner and had been planning to petition to enter the United States on Monday.

 

Zainab Sa’id

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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