Kelowna Daily Courier

Migrant camp shrinks as removals ramp up

By MARIA VERZA & JUAN LOZANO

CIUDAD ACUNA, Mexico — A camp where almost 15,000 migrants had waited along the Texas border just days ago was dramatically smaller Thursday, while across the river in Mexico, Haitian migrants in a growing camp awoke surrounded by security forces and a helicopter overhead.

About 4,000 migrants remained Thursday under the bridge between Del Rio and Mexico, Department of Homeland Security officials said. The number peaked sharply on Saturday, as migrants driven by confusion over the Biden administration’s policies and misinformation on social media converged at the crossing.

Food, shelter and medical care was being provided to those who need it officials said. About 1,400 had been sent to Haiti on 13 flights, rapidly expelled under the pandemic public health authority known as Title 42, DHS officials told reporters. Another 3,200 are in U.S. custody and being processed, while several thousand have returned to Mexico,

Mexico’s immigration agency had estimated late Wednesday there were as many as 600 migrants in Ciudad Acuna. The riverside camp appeared to hold that many at its peak. Other migrants are scattered through the city in hotels and private homes. A city official said Wednesday that Mexican authorities had removed about 250 Haitian migrants from the city since Sunday evening. Still, “several thousand” migrants returning to Mexico from the Del Rio camp seemed an exaggeration.

The State Department is in talks with Brazil and Chile to allow some Haitians who were previously residing in those countries to return, but the issue is complicated because some no longer have legal status there, the officials said.

The U.S. and Mexico appeared eager to end the increasingly politicized humanitarian situation at the border, even as the U.S. expulsion of Haitians to their troubled homeland caused blowback for the president.

Joe Biden’s special envoy to Haiti, Daniel Foote, submitted a letter of resignation protesting the “inhumane” large-scale expulsions of Haitian migrants.

In Mexico, migrants who had camped in a park beside the river in Ciudad Acuna found state police trucks spaced every 30 feet or so between their tents and the water’s edge. Still, after anxious minutes of indecision, dozens of families opted to hustle into the river and cross at a point where there was only one municipal police vehicle, calculating it was better to take their chances with U.S. authorities.

The entrance to the park was blocked and just outside, National Guard troops and immigration agents waited along with three buses; another helicopter flew overhead.

The camp’s usual early morning hum was silenced as migrants tried to decide what to do.

Guileme Paterson, a 36-year-old from Haiti, appeared dazed. “It is a difficult moment,” she said before beginning to cross the Rio Grande with her husband and four children.

Mexican authorities’ operation appeared designed to drive the migrants back into Texas. A fence and the line of state police vehicles funneled the migrants back to the crossing point they had been using all week.

Buses that had been waiting left empty. The majority of the camp’s migrants remained.

“Bad, bad, bad, things are going badly,” said Michou Petion, carrying her 2-year-old son in her arms toward the river. “The U.S. is deporting a lot to Haiti, now I don’t know if I can enter or leave.”

“We’re talking to a lot of people and they are nervous, they’re afraid, they’re desperate,” said Christoph Jankhoefer of Doctors Without Borders, which is working in the Ciudad Acuna camp.

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2021-09-24T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-09-24T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://kelownadailycourier.pressreader.com/article/281659668188286

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