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US plans to turn back migrants caught at Mexican border, cites coronavirus

News Service
10:13 - 18/03/2020 Wednesday
Update: 10:16 - 18/03/2020 Wednesday
REUTERS
File photo: Migrants, mainly from Cuba, block the Paso del Norte border crossing bridge after a U.S. appeals court blocked the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) program, which sent asylum seekers back to Mexico to await the outcome of their case, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico February 28, 2020
File photo: Migrants, mainly from Cuba, block the Paso del Norte border crossing bridge after a U.S. appeals court blocked the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) program, which sent asylum seekers back to Mexico to await the outcome of their case, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico February 28, 2020

The Trump administration is considering immediately returning any foreigners caught at the U.S.-Mexico border to Mexico, arguing the step is necessary to combat the fast-spreading coronavirus, according to two administration officials.

The measure, which remains under discussion, would apply to migrants caught crossing the illegally outside ports of entry and would not affect legal immigration or commercial traffic, the officials said.

However, two other officials, with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), disputed that removing all foreigners caught at the border to Mexico was under consideration.

The possible administration move, first reported by The New York Times, would likely face court challenges and may require the cooperation of the Mexican government.

The Trump administration has sought to escalate its response to the coronavirus in recent weeks as the disease has spread across the United States, causing schools and businesses to shutter while killing more than 100 people nationwide.

The DHS and CBP officials said separately on Tuesday that U.S. border officials would step up returns of Mexican nationals caught crossing the border illegally through an existing authority known as a "voluntary return."

Under that practice, U.S. officials can offer Mexican nationals caught at the border the option to return to Mexico as an alternative to formal deportation proceedings in the United States.

"If we return people immediately without taking them back to our processing centers, then you're minimizing the exposure," the CBP official said.

All four officials requested anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the plans.

Immigrant rights groups slammed the idea of mass returns of foreign nationals to Mexico.

"People fleeing violence from Mexico and Central American countries are actually at greater the risk of contracting coronavirus in the United States than in their home countries at this point," said Linda Rivas, executive director at advocacy group Las Americas in El Paso.

Mexico has reported 82 coronavirus cases so far, compared with nearly 6,000 in the United States.

The United States already sends non-Mexican asylum seekers to that country under a program known as the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP). The U.S. Supreme Court allowed that program to remain in effect last week pending the outcome of a legal challenge.

In a separate move on Tuesday, Guatemalan government said on Tuesday that it had suspended the entrance of deportation flights from the United States amid concerns over the spread of the coronavirus.

Mexico yet to see formal U.S. plan to deport migrants due to coronavirus

The Mexican government has not yet received a formal proposal from the United States about migrants in that country being returned to Mexico due to coronavirus, Mexico's foreign ministry said a brief statement late on Tuesday.

The statement added that Mexico would analyze the reach of such a proposal and act in defense of its interests as well as considerations including public health and human rights.

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4 years ago