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  1. #1
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    ‘No Asylum Here’: Some Say U.S. Border Agents Rejected Them

    ‘No Asylum Here’: Some Say U.S. Border Agents Rejected Them

    By Caitlin Dickerson and Miriam Jordan
    May 3, 2017

    TIJUANA, Mexico — By the time Francisca, Armando and their two surviving children made it to the United States border in late February, they were hungry, exhausted and virtually penniless. But the couple, who said that a son had been killed by a gang back in El Salvador and that their daughter had nearly been raped, thought they had finally reached safety.

    Under United States and international law, all people who ask for asylum are supposed to be allowed into the country to plead their case. But instead, they said, a Customs and Border Protection agent shooed them away.

    “There is no asylum here,” Francisca, 32, recalled the agent telling them. “We are not granting asylum.”

    Customs agents have increasingly turned away asylum seekers without so much as an interview, according to migrants and their lawyers, in a trend first noted several months ago and that appeared to accelerate after President Trump’s inauguration. That has left an untold number of migrants trapped in Mexico, where they have sometimes fallen prey to kidnappers seeking ransom or been driven into the hands of drug cartels and smugglers. Some have tried to enter the United States illegally and dangerously, through the desert or across the Rio Grande, a risky journey.

    “By rejecting asylum seekers at its borders, the United States is turning them away to face danger, persecution, torture, kidnappings and potential trafficking in Mexico,” Human Rights First, an organization that has studied the problem, said in a report released on Wednesday.

    No hard data exists on how often customs agents prevented asylum seekers from entering the United States, but many do make it past the border gates. Human Rights First said it had documented 125 people or families from countries including Colombia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico and Turkey who were turned away at entry points in Arizona, California and Texas from November to April. The organization said the actual number was likely to be far higher, since most of the migrants never make contact with a lawyer or an American advocate.

    In response to questions, Customs and Border Protection said that the United States adhered to international law and convention permitting people to seek asylum on the grounds that they were being persecuted because of their race, religion, nationality, political belief or other factors.

    “If an officer or agent encounters a U.S.-bound migrant without legal papers and the person expresses fear of being returned to his/her home country, our officers process them for an interview with an asylum officer,” the agency said in a statement.

    The Trump administration has not ordered customs agents to turn away asylum seekers. But the president has made it clear he believes the asylum system in its current form contributes to the problem of illegal immigration.

    By law, those who request protection at a United States entry point must first be referred for a screening, known as a credible-fear interview, with an asylum officer from United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.

    If the asylum officer decides people have a significant chance of proving a fear of persecution in their home country, they are allowed to apply for asylum before a judge, and from October 2016 through March 2017, according to the immigration agency, more than 38,000 people passed that step.

    But in recent years, judges have approved less than half of asylum requests. For migrants from Mexico and Central American countries, those numbers are even lower: only 10 percent to 23 percent since 2011, according to data compiled by researchers at Syracuse University. Many asylum seekers from the region claim they have been targeted by gangs, which is harder to prove than political persecution, or base their claims on poverty, which is not a ground for asylum.

    If they are denied, asylum seekers can be deported. But since many are released while their case is pending, some never return to court and evade deportation. The Trump administration has said asylum seekers should be released less often, and some lawyers said more of their clients are now being detained.

    Border crossings have dropped drastically since Mr. Trump took office, a sign that his tough talk is discouraging people from even trying the journey. Advocates for migrants assert that Mr. Trump’s talk has also emboldened some customs officers to ignore the law and take it upon themselves to keep migrants from receiving an asylum interview.

    “The tenor of interactions with C.B.P. officers has veered toward the openly hostile following his election,” said Nicole Ramos, an American lawyer representing asylum seekers traveling through Tijuana.

    Francisca, who requested her last name be withheld because of concerns for her family’s safety, said she tried to show some documents to the border agent in Tijuana — the death certificate for their son who was killed and a police report documenting the attempted rape of their daughter, also by gang members. But the official threatened to have the family deported if they did not retreat into Mexico, she said.

    “They treated us like we were trespassing,” said Francisca, who returned to a shelter for women and children with her 14-year-old daughter. Her husband, Armando, is with their 18-year-old son at a men’s shelter down the street.

    The report by Human Rights First said that a Honduran family was kidnapped and forced to pay a ransom for their release after they were turned back to Mexico twice by agents in Texas. Shaw Drake, the lead researcher of the report, said the area surrounding the ports of entry in Texas had been nicknamed the “hunting ground,” where cartels see migrants as easy prey for exploitation.

    When he fled the Mexican state of Guerrero, Benito Jiménez Alarcón, 22, carried a plastic bag filled with photographs of injuries from the time he was kidnapped for three days by gang members. They show bruises spanning his back from side to side, where he said he was struck with clubs. His legs are covered in bright purple and blue knots from gun lashings.

    He thought he would receive an asylum hearing after American border agents rifled through his belongings, including the photographs. The agents also asked him to remove his pants so they could see his injuries, he said.

    But the agents, possibly acting beyond their purview, told him that he needed police reports. Mr. Jiménez, who was at a Tijuana shelter this week, said that it would be impossible to obtain such reports because the police and gangs in his village collaborate with each other.

    A border agent told him he could claim asylum only with the help of a lawyer or through Grupo Beta, a Mexican organization that organized a numbering system to regulate the flow of migrants so they did not all seek asylum at once. But that system was intended mainly for Haitians, and non-Haitians have said they have not been given numbers.

    Mary Galván, a Brazilian nun who runs Madre Assunta, a shelter for women and girls in Tijuana, said that asylum seekers who spend weeks preparing documents to prove their cases often return within hours because they are rebuffed at the border.

    Outside in the courtyard, Abi and Cesia Quijada, 10- and 11-year-old girls from El Salvador, played with dolls and jewelry-making kits. Their mother, Sandra, spoke on the phone with her eldest daughter, Xiomara, 16, who was at a shelter in Texas. The family was separated in Mexico en route to Tijuana.

    Sandra said she worried about Xiomara, who struggles with depression and has attempted suicide. “I feel so powerless,” she said, explaining that they escaped together after Sandra’s former partner, a gang member, became abusive.

    Without looking up from the earrings she was carefully constructing with hot pink beads and purple plastic string, Cesia asked in Spanish if it was true that the United States was no longer accepting “refugios” — people seeking refuge — like them. Abi said she wanted to go to America “because it’s safe there.” Her sister added, “Because they protect children.”

    Caitlin Dickerson reported from Tijuana, and Miriam Jordan from Los Angeles.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/03/u...r-customs.html
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  2. #2
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    Without looking up from the earrings she was carefully constructing with hot pink beads and purple plastic string, Cesia asked in Spanish if it was true that the United States was no longer accepting “refugios” — people seeking refuge — like them. Abi said she wanted to go to America “because it’s safe there.” Her sister added, “Because they protect children.”
    This is a lie. We do not protect children, we can't even properly protect our own child citizens. You stop lying, you stop scamming, you stop coming here wanting crap we can't give you and even if we had it, we don't want to give it to you, and if we wanted to give it to you, we can't afford to give it to you.

    Congress, get off you butts and repeal ALL US Asylum, Refugee and UAC laws immediately. Anyone who is not a US citizen entering this country without papers will be denied entry or treated as an illegal alien, detained, fined and deported penniless. UAC who enter will be delivered to the nearest Consulate of their home country as foreign runaways to be returned to their country at the expense of their Consulate. If they are released into the US by the Consulate instead of returned to their home country, we will close all Consulates of that country in the United States and deport all consulate diplomatic personnel.

    Americans are fed up with this, we've had it. We want this problem solved and that requires action by the US Congress. There is only so much the Executive Branch can do under existing laws clearly written with provisions and loopholes that invalidate the very purpose the laws were written to accomplish to begin with.
    Last edited by Judy; 05-06-2018 at 06:36 PM.
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  3. #3
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    “By rejecting asylum seekers at its borders, the United States is turning them away to face danger, persecution, torture, kidnappings and potential trafficking in Mexico,” Human Rights First, an organization that has studied the problem, said in a report released on Wednesday.
    No, they chose to expose themselves to danger by trying to get asylum where they don't qualify for asylum.

    So like Jorge Ramos, they say Mexico is dangerous. SPREAD THE WORD.

    “They treated us like we were trespassing,” said Francisca, who returned to a shelter for women and children with her 14-year-old daughter.
    Maybe because they are?

  4. #4
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    These people don't qualify for asylum anywhere. They're scammers, whiners, moochers, con artists, drug runners, criminals, radicals and socialists. Do not let them in, deport them immediately if they get in, and change the law to make THAT the law.
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  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Judy View Post
    They're scammers, whiners, moochers, con artists, drug runners, criminals, radicals and socialists.
    I don't agree. I believe many are victims. It's just that we can't carry the whole world. The difficult thing is we cannot control their countries. So we must leave their fate, to fate!

  6. #6
    Moderator Beezer's Avatar
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    REJECT THEM ALL!

    WE HAVE CRIME, RAPE, TORTURE, MURDER, GANGS, DRUGS, POVERTY HERE!

    NO ASYLUM...GO HOME!

    GET ON BIRTH CONTROL AND FIGHT FOR YOUR OWN COUNTRY.
    ILLEGAL ALIENS HAVE "BROKEN" OUR IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

    DO NOT REWARD THEM - DEPORT THEM ALL

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    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  8. #8
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    The asylum, refugee and UAC laws have to be repealed so that anyone who wants to enter this country at a port of entry without citizenship or valid unexpired documents can be and is rejected at the border or port of entry station and anyone who sneaks in otherwise is treated as an illegal alien.
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
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