WOLA: Advocacy for Human Rights in the Americas
21 Dec 2023 | News

Weekly U.S.-Mexico Border Update: Heavy migration, no Congress deal, Texas law

With this series of weekly updates, WOLA seeks to cover the most important developments at the U.S.-Mexico border. See past weekly updates here.

This will be the last Weekly Border Update until January 19. Best wishes for a happy holiday.

THIS WEEK IN BRIEF:

More than 10,000 migrants per day, mostly asylum seekers, have been arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border. ​​Border Patrol sectors seeing the most arrivals are Del Rio and El Paso, Texas; Tucson, Arizona; and San Diego, California. Some of the rush is likely the product of false rumors and misinformation. Notably, it is happening even though U.S.-bound migration through Panama and Honduras has been dropping sharply since October.

The U.S. Congress has adjourned for 2023 with no agreement on Republicans’ demands for new restrictions on asylum and other migration pathways—their main condition for supporting a $110.5 billion package of aid to Ukraine and Israel, new border spending, and other priorities. A small group of senators and senior Biden administration officials has been meeting regularly, but has produced neither legislative language nor a basic framework. They will resume consideration of the spending bill after Congress returns on January 8, amid a growing outcry from progressive legislators and migrants’ rights defense groups.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) signed into law S.B.4, which makes irregular border crossings into Texas a state crime. Upon arrest, migrants will be jailed if they do not agree to be returned to Mexico—but Mexico is refusing to accept returnees from the Texas state government. The ACLU, El Paso County, and El Paso-based rights groups quickly filed suit in federal court to block the law.

 

THE FULL UPDATE:

Migration at the border hits daily highs, even as it drops along the U.S.-bound route

December 2023 has so far seen some of the heaviest arrivals ever of migrants, mostly asylum seekers, at the U.S.-Mexico border. Border Patrol processed about 10,500 migrants on December 19, and 10,800 on December 18. Of the December 18 total, about 40 percent were reportedly families or unaccompanied children. As of Tuesday evening, CBP had 27,159 migrants in custody nationwide. With most days topping 10,000 in recent weeks, the U.S. border and migration system is at a “breaking point,” CNN’s Priscilla Álvarez reported.

In order to free up officers to assist Border Patrol with processing migrants, CBP’s port of entry in Lukeville, Arizona remains closed, as does one of two border bridges into Eagle Pass, Texas, and the PedWest pedestrian crossing at San Ysidro, between Tijuana and San Diego. On December 18, CBP closed railroad bridges in Eagle Pass and El Paso, which account for about 36 percent of train cargo between the United States and Mexico. Trains allegedly are crossing with migrants aboard, though railroad companies dispute that. In Chihuahua, Mexico, “We thought that the arrival of migrants had dropped significantly, but since last week it increased to about a thousand people on each freight train trip,” said state official Óscar Ibáñez Hernández, who cited criminal groups misinforming migrants about the need to travel now.

Reasons

Ibáñez Hernández was alluding to false rumors circulating in Mexico that the U.S. government is about to close the border and shut down use of the CBP One app to make appointments at ports of entry. The U.S. Embassy in Mexico has circulated messages on social media seeking to debunk the CBP One rumor.

Another reason for the increase is a yearlong acceleration of arrivals of Mexican families, many of them fleeing parts of the country, like Pacific coastal states, hit hard by organized crime-related violence. The state government of Michoacán, Mexico estimated that 2,500 residents of the state, displaced by violence, are currently residing in shelters in Mexican border cities.

Acting CBP chief Troy Miller told CNN that unscrupulous travel agencies in some countries, like Senegal, are also to blame, as they have been offering travel packages to the U.S.-Mexico border.

Hotspots

In its analysis of CBP’s October migration data (the agency has not yet published November data), WOLA’s November 17 Border Update noted “a general westward shift” in migration, away from Texas and toward Arizona and California. While Arizona and California continue to receive heavy flows of people, there is no longer any westward shift, as Border Patrol sectors in Texas are seeing significant increases.

About 4,400 of Tuesday’s 10,500 migrants crossed in Border Patrol’s Del Rio Sector in mid-Texas. There, in Eagle Pass, “I visited a (holding) facility with a maximum capacity of 1,000. There were nearly 6,000. I’ve never seen it this high,” Rep. Tony Gonzales (R), who represents this area and much of the Texas-Mexico border, told Fox News. On Sunday, nearly half of migrants arriving in Eagle Pass were Venezuelan citizens.

This is especially notable because Eagle Pass has been an epicenter of Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s (R) “Operation Lone Star” border security buildup. Miles of barbed wire, fencing, police, national guardsmen, trespassing arrests, and a wall of buoys in the Rio Grande have not deterred asylum seekers from coming to the small Texas border city of 30,000.

Further west in Texas, in the El Paso Sector, thousands of migrants have been arriving atop trains in Ciudad Juárez, across the river, despite cold temperatures (see the above quote from the official from Chihuahua state, which includes Ciudad Juárez).

Near Lukeville, Arizona, smugglers have sawed through one segment of Trump-era border wall 41 times to let migrants pass through and turn themselves in to Border Patrol, the Washington Post reported. Lukeville is within Border Patrol’s Tucson Sector, which has been migrants’ number-one border destination since July. There, apprehensions during the week ending December 14 totaled a very high 18,400, down slightly from the week ending December 7 (18,900). Border Patrol processing facilities in the sector are at 130 percent capacity.

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs (D) has ordered a deployment of National Guard personnel near the border. The New Yorker reported about the impact that the temporary closure of the Lukeville border crossing is having on tourism a short drive south, in Arizonans’ popular beachside vacation spot of Puerto Peñasco, Sonora. Arizona’s senators, Mark Kelly (D) and Kyrsten Sinema (I), wrote a letter to Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials calling for new Shelter and Services Program funding for humanitarian services.

Further west in Jacumba Springs, California, in the San Diego Sector over an hour’s drive east of San Diego, hundreds of asylum seekers per day continue to arrive, seeking to turn themselves in. Border Patrol is having them wait for extended periods in an “open air detention site,” even as nighttime temperatures drop into the 40s (F). Several San Diego-area groups submitted a detailed complaint about this practice to the  DHS Office of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties.

Political fallout

President Joe Biden and Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador spoke on December 21 about migration, CNN’s Álvarez tweeted. Meanwhile, an increasing amount of punditry predicts that public perceptions of the border situation are providing the Trump campaign with momentum going into the 2024 election, even as the ex-president repeats “poison the blood” rhetoric paraphrasing Mein Kampf.

In Democratic-leaning El Paso, Politico found that the city’s Mexican-American population is getting fatigued with migrant arrivals. “Trump, he started rough. But now that you see it, when Biden came in, he messed everything up,” a Juárez-born chef told reporter David Siders.

Decreases further south

In an unusual turn of events, migration is increasing at the U.S.-Mexico border even as it decreases along the U.S.-bound migration route further south. Panama, Honduras, and Mexico have been reporting fewer people coming, after record-breaking levels in late summer and early fall.

Panama released statistics this week documenting a 24 percent decline in migration through the Darién Gap from October to November, and a 50 percent decline in migration from September to November. This would point to fewer people departing the South American continent by land.

Monthly Migration Through Panama’s Darién Gap November 2023: Venezuela 61%, China 11%, Haiti (plus Brazil and Chile) 9%, Ecuador 8%, Colombia 5%, all others <1% Since January 2020: Venezuela 53%, Haiti (plus Brazil and Chile) 21%, Ecuador 9%, all others <3%

Data table

 

Migration from Venezuela declined 35 percent from October to November—a possible short-term reaction to the United States’ resumption of deportation flights, plus end-of-year seasonal patterns—while migration from China increased 39 percent.

Still, Darién Gap migration in 2023 stood at a previously unimaginable 495,459 people as of November 30, and now exceeds half a million. The journey continues to be miserable and dangerous. During the first 10 months of 2023, Doctors Without Borders reported treating 397 migrants in the Darién Gap who survived sexual violence: “last month alone, there were 107 cases.”

Reporting mainly from the Darién Gap, the New York Times’s Julie Turkewitz found that “as migrants stream their struggles and successes to millions back home, some are becoming small-time celebrities and influencers in their own right” on social media. Following a visit to the Darién Gap’s gateway in northwestern Colombia, Dan Restrepo of the Center for American Progress recommended greater emphasis on “host community solutions” and “development finance tools” to integrate migrants in Latin American countries.

North of Panama, numbers have also been dropping. Registries of in-transit migration through Honduras shrank 41 percent from October to November. This means fewer people have been coming from South America and through an increasingly used aerial entry point in Nicaragua.

Honduras’s “Irregular” Migrant Encounters (Since August 2022) November 2023: Venezuela 44%, Cuba 20%, Haiti 9%, Ecuador 6%, Guinea 5%, China 4%, All Others <4% Since August 2022: Venezuela 41%, Cuba 18%, Haiti 14%, Ecuador 10%, Colombia 2.2%, All Others <2% Venezuela Cuba Haiti Ecuador Colombia China Guinea Senegal Mauritania Other Countries 22-Aug 10769 6899 836 1583 314 42 19 118 18 2278 22-Sep 11325 5144 863 1685 379 45 23 135 14 2220 22-Oct 14027 5290 1856 5793 723 99 30 185 18 3037 22-Nov 3756 9219 2858 5130 400 186 34 158 38 3857 22-Dec 1923 7225 2518 6557 231 405 22 87 63 4034 23-Jan 1866 2079 5365 4562 296 415 72 202 31 4054 23-Feb 4462 629 4092 5010 449 688 97 159 71 4449 23-Mar 9112 776 2991 2493 624 719 90 191 88 4576 23-Apr 10883 1301 2392 1692 682 985 87 472 87 4350 23-May 11809 2397 1629 2147 654 801 277 831 427 4398 23-Jun 12698 3254 1305 2817 488 1045 118 390 1801 2870 23-Jul 25050 6721 1558 6116 954 980 389 1398 2036 3769 23-Aug 35669 11343 4051 5789 1330 654 1005 1629 1036 3020 23-Sep 42550 19288 14898 4830 2174 570 1762 1066 48 3453 23-Oct 34547 17513 35529 3581 2021 1006 2304 1235 75 4198 23-Nov 26440 11671 5438 3725 2003 2200 3143 685 87 4395

Data table

 

Mexico’s migrant apprehensions fell 4 percent from September to October; like the United States, Mexico has not reported November migration data yet.

Mexico’s Migrant Apprehensions (Since 2022) October 2023: Venezuela 30%, Haiti 11%, Honduras 10%, Cuba 8%, Ecuador 7.5%, Guatemala 7.1%, All Others <4% Since January 2022: Venezuela 26%, Honduras 16%, Guatemala 13%, Ecuador 7%, Cuba 6%, Nicaragua 5.2%, All Others <5% Venezuela Honduras Guatemala Ecuador Cuba Nicaragua Colombia El Salvador Haiti Other Countries 22-Jan 2733 5841 6304 246 2214 2234 503 1565 368 1374 22-Feb 1120 5929 5191 202 3384 1843 2986 1721 254 1674 22-Mar 1209 6390 6075 276 6333 2701 3375 2338 205 1851 22-Apr 1960 6457 6920 513 6103 2854 1746 2579 304 1770 22-May 1640 7544 7222 780 3191 3474 3031 3307 246 2855 22-Jun 3919 6507 7010 668 2481 1561 2840 1990 110 3337 22-Jul 6431 7461 6578 719 2550 2182 2169 2936 145 2731 22-Aug 16885 5741 4927 1185 2159 2327 2479 2544 174 4298 22-Sep 15381 5309 4932 1528 3244 4062 2704 2471 223 3938 22-Oct 21781 5475 4632 3266 3247 5711 2179 2144 308 3458 22-Nov 12298 5895 5380 4459 3318 7329 2225 2379 505 5697 22-Dec 11721 4379 4344 8314 3251 4547 2041 1271 1605 7509 23-Jan 5329 3911 4015 6081 2919 2200 964 1234 2319 8388 23-Feb 6721 5202 4249 7003 384 408 1435 1234 2971 8434 23-Mar 9119 6053 6025 3126 237 205 3170 1793 3769 11131 23-Apr 6725 3759 3303 1018 156 164 1369 1118 1658 5723 23-May 17258 5034 3259 2187 472 225 1258 834 1496 8001 23-Jun 18480 11162 6952 4559 1021 883 1313 1474 1573 10848 23-Jul 24236 15450 7484 6115 1837 1762 1756 1854 1951 11070 23-Aug 21936 20139 12673 7328 1320 1939 2450 2533 1258 10774 23-Sep 30560 12059 9146 8199 5022 2829 3905 2603 4079 18140 23-Oct 28275 8954 6600 6937 7202 1887 3055 2656 10646 16696

Data table

 

Though CBP has not yet published November migration numbers, Border Patrol Chief Jason Owens told CNN that the agency apprehended about 192,000 migrants in November, a 2 percent increase over 188,000 in October.

It is unclear why trendlines are diverging between the U.S.-Mexico border and points further south. The population crossing into the United States now could be more Mexican and Central American—nationalities not captured in Panama’s or Honduras’s statistics—than in past months. Or it could be that Venezuelans and other non-Mexican, non-Central American migrants who have been waiting in Mexico for more than 1-2 months, in many cases for CBP One appointments, are giving up and deciding to cross now between the ports of entry.

 

Congress departs Washington, with no deal on asylum restrictions for Ukraine aid

The U.S. Senate, following the House last week, adjourned for 2023 without approving the Biden administration’s request for $110.5 billion in assistance for Ukraine and Israel, border items, and other priorities. Republican legislators are demanding restrictions on asylum and other migrant protections as the price for their support. Negotiations between a small group of senators have not yet produced either legislative language or a consensus framework.

Negotiations continue, and Congress will take up the funding request when its 2024 session begins after January 8.

The small group, joined by top Biden administration officials like White House Chief of Staff Jeff Zients and DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, met through the December 16-17 weekend, claiming progress but no agreement. “Talks between the White House and key senators have not veered widely from three main areas of discussion,” the Associated Press reported. Those are “toughening asylum protocols for migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border; bolstering border enforcement with more personnel and high-tech systems; and deterring migrants from making the journey in the first place.”

According to partial, secondary news reports, Senate negotiators and administration officials had been discussing the following Republican demands for their support of the budget package:

  • A suspension of the right to seek asylum, with Title 42-style expulsions, once migrant arrivals reach a certain threshold.
    • Democrats in the negotiations appear to be open to this, but the two sides disagree over the threshold (for instance, number of migrant apprehensions per day) that would trigger expulsions.
  • A geographic and numeric expansion of “expedited removal,” a procedure that requires asylum seekers to defend their cases before an asylum officer in a very rapid manner.
    • Democrats in the negotiations are apparently open to expanded expedited removal, but disagree about how broadly to expand it, both numerically and geographically (into the U.S. interior).
  • Higher standards of credible fear that asylum seekers placed in expedited removal proceedings would have to meet in their screening interviews.
    • Democrats in the negotiations appear to be in broad agreement with this.
  • Detention of asylum seekers while pursuing their claims.
    • Democrats in the negotiations may be open to this, but disagree on which asylum seekers would be subject to mandatory detention, how much detention space would be involved, and presumably whether detainees would include families with children.
  • A Republican demand to roll back much of the 1950s-era presidential authority to grant humanitarian parole, currently being used to admit Ukrainians and a combined 30,000 citizens per month from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela.
    • Democrats are reportedly resisting this.
  • Republican demands to negotiate new “safe third country” agreements to send asylum seekers elsewhere, and perhaps a new “Remain in Mexico” program.
    • Democrats are reportedly resisting this.

White House officials met on December 16 with members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC), which has voiced strong opposition to weakening asylum. CHC members say they have been left in the dark about ongoing negotiations.

The non-governmental community of migrants’ rights defenders continues to urge Democratic senators to refuse concessions that might weaken the decades-old right to seek asylum when on U.S. soil. A letter from four leading members of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops warned against new asylum restrictions, warning that they “will lead to many more deaths of immigrants on the border.” Marisa Limón Garza, executive director of the El Paso-based Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center, called on senators not to treat migrants as bargaining chips. Lorella Praeli of Community Change urged President Biden not to “ cave to the MAGA immigration agenda.” Added America’s Voice, “ It’s like having taken one step forward and a thousand back.” RAICES paid for a seven-story billboard message in New York’s Times Square, showing four times per hour, displaying the Statue of Liberty behind barbed wire and buoys and the legend “we all yearn to be free.”

Border Patrol agents speaking anonymously to the conservative Washington Examiner said they doubted that the proposed changes would reduce migration at the border. Agents instead demanded more removals and deportations, which would either require Mexico’s acceptance of hundreds of thousands of removed migrants, or a multiplication of costly deportation flights at a time when both pilots and aircraft are in short supply nationwide.

The New York Times found that Democrats’ willingness to entertain some Republican demands on asylum and migrant protections reflects a “seismic shift” to the right in U.S. immigration politics. Many Democrats worry that it will hurt enthusiasm and turnout of Latino and progressive voters. Part of the United States’ rightward shift, Keegan Hamilton wrote at the Los Angeles Times, is greater participation in, and tolerance of, armed militia groups at the border.

 

Texas launches harsh new immigration law, legal challenge filed

On December 18, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) signed into law S.B.4, which makes unauthorized border crossings into Texas a state crime. Civil rights groups pledge to challenge what they’re calling a racial profiling or “show me your papers” law.

As of March, Texas judges will be able to jail migrants who decline to return immediately to Mexico. “When asked what Texas would do if Mexico does not accept migrants deported by the state,” the Texas Tribune reported, Abbott simply replied, “We’re going to send them right back to Mexico.”

The governments of Mexico and Guatemala voiced condemnation of the new law. Members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus called on the U.S. Department of Justice to challenge S.B.4. While possible federal action is unclear, the ACLU filed federal litigation on December 19 seeking to block the law, on behalf of El Paso County, Texas and the El Paso-based Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center and American Gateways.

 

Other News

  • WOLA published three items this week about the border and about U.S.-bound migration.
    • A pictorial report-back from a visit to the Arizona-Sonora border, where Mexico Program staff found a large number of Mexican people fleeing organized crime violence and humanitarian workers assisting large-scale arrivals of asylum seekers.
    • A brief video vividly narrating what staff saw during a late October visit to Necoclí, Colombia, the gateway to the Darién Gap. (With English and Spanish voice-overs)
    • Since 2022, four percent of Cuba’s population has migrated to the U.S.-Mexico border, one of five key trends in Cuban migration documented in a new analysis.
  • A video shared by Texas Public Radio shows Texas National Guardsmen apparently ignoring a migrant woman and baby crying for help in the Rio Grande in Eagle Pass. “Eyewitnesses attested that both mother and child ‘went under for a while’ after several minutes of struggling, before resurfacing again.” A federal CBP airboat speeds by, a few feet away from the woman and child, offering no assistance. Texas’s state Military Department told BBC News that guardsmen “approached by boat and determined that there were no signs of medical distress, injury or incapacitation and they had the ability to return the short distance back to the Mexican shore.”
  • “Our country steps into humanitarian crises all over the world. Why would we not do it inside our own boundaries?” asked a forensic anthropologist in New Mexico, where migrant deaths in the desert have been increasing drastically, High Country News reported.
  • NewsNation reported that migrant deaths by drowning in the Rio Grande are worsening in Eagle Pass, Texas: “Currently, one trailer holds 24 deceased bodies, and officials say they need more trailers…‘This is where we store them… we encounter 2-3 bodies a day.’”
  • The ACLU of San Diego and Imperial Counties, Al Otro Lado, Jewish Family Service of San Diego, and the UCLA Center for Immigration Law and Policy issued a complaint documenting 1,081 family separations, including 400 separations of spouses and 200 separations of adult children and parents, during Border Patrol’s recent processing of increased arrivals of asylum seekers in the San Diego Sector.
  • Two children from Guinea (Africa), aged 10 and 13, spent days on their own in the Bogotá, Colombia airport after being abandoned there. Bogotá is one of a few airports where migrants from Africa change planes along an emerging route that leads to Nicaragua, which does not require visas of most of the continent’s nationalities. From Managua, they travel to the U.S.-Mexico border to seek asylum.
  • TRAC Immigration reported that U.S. immigration courts’ backlog has now reached 3 million cases—4,500 pending cases per judge. It broke 2 million cases in November 2022. (The Justice Department reported 2,464,021 cases as of October 12.)
  • The Secure Mobility Program, a pilot effort of small offices set up this year in Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, and Guatemala, has now channeled 11,000 people to legal U.S. migration pathways, including 3,200 entries into the U.S. refugee program, EFE reported. Secure Mobility has channeled another 281 people to Spain’s refugee program.
  • The United States has deported 52,192 citizens of Guatemala by air in 2023: 29,603 men, 12,849 women and 9,740 minors, both accompanied and unaccompanied; some were part of more than 7,000 family units.

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