U.S. border at ‘breaking point’ as more than 76,000 migrants cross in a month

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Déferlante migratoire au sud des États-Unis : voilà pourquoi Trump veut construire un mur !

The number of migrant families crossing the southwest border has once again broken records, with unauthorized entries nearly doubling what they were a year ago, suggesting that the Trump administration’s aggressive policies have not discouraged new migration to the United States.


More than 76,000 migrants crossed the border without authorization in February, an 11-year high and a strong sign that stepped-up prosecutions, new controls on asylum and harsher detention policies have not reversed what remains a powerful lure for thousands of families fleeing violence and poverty.


“The system is well beyond capacity, and remains at the breaking point,” Kevin K. McAleenan, commissioner of Customs and Border Protection, told reporters in announcing the new data Tuesday.


The nation’s top border enforcement officer painted a picture of processing centres filled to capacity, border agents struggling to meet medical needs and thousands of exhausted members of migrant families crammed into a detention system that was not built to house them – all while newcomers continue to arrive, sometimes by the busload, at the rate of 2,200 a day.


“This is clearly both a border security and a humanitarian crisis,” McAleenan said.


President Donald Trump has used the escalating numbers to justify his plan to build an expanded wall along the 1,900-mile border with Mexico. But a wall would do little to slow migration, most immigration analysts say. While the exact numbers are not known, many of those apprehended along the southern border, including the thousands who present themselves at legal ports of entry, surrender voluntarily to Border Patrol agents and eventually submit legal asylum claims.



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Migrants from Honduras are taken into custody by U.S. Border Patrol agents near Granjeno, Texas on Feb. 1, 2019.


TAMIR KALIFA/THE NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE




The main problem is not one of uncontrolled masses scaling the fences, but a humanitarian challenge created as thousands of migrant families surge into remote areas where the administration has so far failed to devote sufficient resources to care for them, as is required under the law.


The latest numbers stung an administration that has over the past two years introduced a rash of aggressive policies intended to deter migrants from journeying to the United States, including separating families, limiting entries at official ports and requiring some asylum-seekers to wait in Mexico through the duration of their immigration cases.


More than 50,000 adults are currently in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody, the highest number ever.


Despite targeted successes in certain areas – about 2,000 migrants who travelled in a caravan from Central America last year appeared to have given up their cause as of last month after being discouraged by long delays in Tijuana – migrants seem only to have adjusted their routes rather than turn back. Indeed, they are travelling in even larger numbers than before.


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Arrests along the southern border have increased 97 per cent since last year, the Border Patrol said, with a 434 per cent increase in the El Paso, Texas, sector, which covers the state of New Mexico and the two westernmost counties of Texas. Families, mainly from Central America, continue to arrive in ever-larger groups in remote parts of the southwest.


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Asylum seekers from Central America walk toward Border Patrol agents waiting to take them into custody, near Granjeno, Texas. Border authorities detained nearly twice as many migrants – 268,044 – in the first five months of the fiscal year that started in October than were arrested in the same period the previous year.


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At least 70 such groups of 100 or more people have turned themselves in at Border Patrol stations that typically are staffed by only a handful of agents, often hours away from civilization. By comparison, only 13 such groups arrived in the last fiscal year, and two in the year before.


Understanding what is happening on the border is difficult because, while the numbers are currently higher than they have been in several years, they are nowhere near the historic levels of migration seen across the southwest border. Arrests for illegally crossing the border reached up to 1.64 million in 2000, under President Bill Clinton. In the 2018 fiscal year, they reached 396,579. For the first five months of the current fiscal year, 268,044 have been apprehended.


The difference is that the nature of immigration has changed, and the demographics of those arriving now are proving more taxing for border officials to accommodate. Most of those entering the country in earlier years were single men, most of them from Mexico, coming to look for work. If they were arrested, they could quickly be deported.


Now, the majority of border crossers are not single men but families – fathers from Honduras with adolescent boys they are pulling away from gang violence, mothers with toddlers from Guatemala whose farms have been lost to drought. Most of these migrants may not have a good case to remain in the United States permanently, but because of legal constraints, it is not so easy to speedily deport them if they arrive with children and claim protection under the asylum laws.



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Rene Reyes, a Border Patrol EMT, assesses the health conditions of dozens of asylum seekers from Central America who turned themselves in after illegally crossing near Penitas, Texas, on Feb. 1, 2019.


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Families with children can be held in detention for no longer than 20 days, under a much-debated court ruling, and since there are a limited number of detention centres certified to hold families, the practical effect is that most families are released into the country to await their hearings in immigration court. The courts are so backlogged that it could take months or years for cases to be decided.


As part of the announcements Tuesday, McAleenan also said the agency is making sweeping changes to procedures for guaranteeing adequate medical care for migrants – an overhaul brought on by the deaths of two migrant children in the agency’s custody in December. The measures, which include comprehensive health screenings for all migrant children and a new processing centre in El Paso that would help provide better shelter and medical care for migrant families, are an attempt to fix years of health care inadequacies that have left many at risk.



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A boy from Honduras with hydrocephalus watches as fellow asylum-seeking migrants from Central America are taken into custody by Border Patrol agents near Granjeno, Texas.


TAMIR KALIFA/THE NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE




The agency will also expand medical contracts to place health care practitioners – largely registered nurses and nurse practitioners – in “high-risk” and high-traffic locations along the border. It will also dedicate more money for translation services to meet increasing demand from Central Americans, many of whom speak indigenous dialects and may not be able to communicate their needs in English or Spanish.


“These solutions are temporary, and this situation is not sustainable,” McAleenan said.


McAleenan said authorities believe that the large numbers of families are coming because smugglers have effectively communicated across Central America that adults who travel with children will be allowed to enter and stay in the United States.


Brian Hastings, the agency’s chief of law enforcement operations, said that since April 2018, border agents had detected nearly 2,400 cases in which migrants had falsely claimed to be related when they were not, or untruthfully claimed to be younger than 18.


The throngs of new families are also affecting communities on the U.S. side of the border. In El Paso, a volunteer network that temporarily houses the migrants after they are released from custody has had to expand to 20 facilities, compared with only three during the same period last year. Migrants are now being housed in churches, a converted nursing home and about 125 hotel rooms that are being paid for with donations.



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Migrants seeking for asylum in the U.S. are seen in Juventud 2000 migrant shelter in Tijuana, on Mar. 5, 2019. According to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, statistics observed more than a 300 per cent increase in the number of family units apprehended compared to the same time period in 2018.


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“We had never seen these kinds of numbers,” said Ruben Garcia, director of the organization, called Annunciation House.


He said that during one week in February, immigration authorities had released more than 3,600 migrants to his organization, the highest number in any single week since the group’s founding in 1978.


For the most part, Garcia said that his staff and volunteer workers had been able to keep up with the surge, often making frantic calls to churches to request access to more space for housing families on short notice. But sometimes their best efforts were upended, he said, including on one day last week when authorities dropped off 150 more migrants than planned.


“We just didn’t have the space,” Garcia said.