refugiados
Brownsville (United States) (AFP) - Two days after being admitted into the United States, Roberto Martinez and Javier Liendo are already taking on odd jobs, repairing walls and washing cars. The two Venezuelans say they came to the country to work, and so they are. In Brownsville, Texas -- directly across a river from Matamoros, Mexico -- migrants are released into the city after turning themselves into border patrol and pledging to present the details of their asylum request to a judge. It can take up to three years for their cases to make their way through the immigration court system, and ...
AFP
Brownsville (United States) (AFP) - Dasling Sanchez rests on a piece of cardboard with her two children near a gas station in Brownsville, Texas, a border town where hundreds of migrants have arrived ahead of immigration restrictions ending, which some fear may actually complicate entry. On Thursday, US President Joe Biden's administration will lift Title 42, the strict protocol implemented by Donald Trump to deny entry to migrants, including asylum seekers, based on the Covid pandemic. Although the looming expiration has raised fears of a deluge of illegal entries along the southern US border...
AFP
Monterrey (Mexico) (AFP) - Haitian migrants turned away at the US border are struggling to adapt to life in Mexico, where crime, a lack of jobs and difficulties obtaining documents are sapping their morale. The United States announced on Friday that the last of the migrants camped illegally under a bridge on the Texas side of the border had either left or been removed, many deported to Haiti. Hours later Haitian migrants abandoned another makeshift encampment in Ciudad Acuna on the Mexican side of the border. But their departure was by no means the end of a crisis that has seen tens of thousan...
AFP
Washington (AFP) - Asylum seekers forced to remain in Mexico while their cases are being resolved in the United States will begin to be admitted into the US as of next week, President Joe Biden's administration announced Friday. Biden instructed the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) earlier this month to take action to end the controversial "Remain in Mexico" program put in place by his predecessor Donald Trump. It saw tens of thousands of non-Mexican asylum seekers -- mostly from Central America -- sent back over the border pending the outcome of their asylum applications, creating a ...
AFP
Washington (AFP) - Asylum seekers forced to remain in Mexico while their cases are being resolved in the United States will begin to be admitted into the US as of next week, President Joe Biden's administration announced Friday. Biden instructed the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) earlier this month to take action to end the controversial "Remain in Mexico" program put in place by his predecessor Donald Trump. It saw tens of thousands of non-Mexican asylum seekers -- mostly from Central America -- sent back over the border pending the outcome of their asylum applications, creating a ...
AFP
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