The lack of flights hinders deportations with Biden’s new immigration policy

Thousands of people have been deported to date due to this measure, which orders the suspension of asylum processing when a certain number of arrests is reached.

By Elliot Spagat

SAN DIEGO (AP).- The Border Patrol arrested Gerardo Henao 14 hours after the President Joe Biden ordered this week lay off the asylum processing in the border of USA with Mexico. But instead of being deportee summarily, the agents They left him the next day at a bus stop in San Diegowhere he boarded a train to the airport to catch a flight to Newark, New Jersey.

Hainautwho left her jewelry business in Medellin Colombiadue to constant extortion attemptshad one thing in its favor: the shortage of flights of deportation to that country. The lack of resources, diplomatic limitations and logistical obstacles make it difficult for the Government of the President Joe Biden impose your restriction on a large scale.

The policy, which went into effect Wednesday, has an exception for “operational considerations,” official language that acknowledges that the government lacks the money and authority to deport everyone subject to the measure, especially people from South American countries. Asia, Africa and Europe that recently arrived at the border.

The Department of Homeland Security said in a detailed document outlining the ban that “demographics and nationalities encountered at the border significantly impact” its ability to deport people.

Thousands of immigrants have been deported under the ban so far, according to two senior Department of Homeland Security officials who briefed reporters on Friday on the condition that their names not be revealed. There were 17 deportation flights, including one to Uzbekistan. Among those deported are people from Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Peru and Mexico.

U.S. Border Patrol agents with a group of migrants near Dulzura, California, on June 5, 2024. Photo: Gregory Bull, AP

Henao, 59, said a Border Patrol agent told him about the ban after he was picked up Wednesday on a dirt road near a high-voltage power line in the Rocky Mountains east of San Diego. The agent processed release papers ordering him to appear in immigration court on October 23 in New Jersey. He casually asked Henao why he fled Colombia, but did not pursue that line of questioning.

“It was nothing,” Henao said at a San Diego transit center, where Border Patrol brought in four busloads of migrants in a four-hour span Thursday afternoon. “They took my photo, my fingerprints and that was it.”

Many of the migrants released that day came from China, India, Colombia and Ecuador. One group included men from Mauritania, Sudan and Ethiopia.

“Hello, if you just arrived, you have been released from immigration custody and can go to the airport,” a volunteer with a megaphone told the migrants, directing them to the light rail platform across the parking lot. “They can take it for free if they don’t have money for a taxi or an Uber.”

According to the measure, asylum procedures are suspended when arrests for irregular crossings reach 2,500 per day. It ends when your average is below 1,500 for a consecutive week.

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Asylum-seeking migrants line up as they wait to be processed after crossing the border from Mexico, Wednesday, June 5, 2024, in San Diego, California. Photo: Eugene Garcia, AP

Border officials were told to give top priority to detaining immigrants who can be easily deported, followed by “hard-to-remove” nationalities, which require at least five days to be issued travel documents, and then nationalities “ very difficult to expel”, whose governments do not accept flights from the United States.

The instructions are set out in a memo addressed to the agents, which was reported by the New York Post. The Associated Press confirmed its contents with a US official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because it has not been publicly disclosed.

The Department of Homeland Security has been clear about the obstacles, said Theresa Cardinal Brown, senior adviser on immigration and border policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center, a Washington think tank.

“There is a limitation on the resources that the Government has for the detention and removal of people, and particularly towards countries where it is difficult for us to remove people because the (other) Government is not cooperating,” Brown explained. “We cannot detain them indefinitely.”

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) conducted 679 deportation flights between January and May, nearly 60 percent of them to Guatemala and Honduras, according to Witness at the Border. , an advocacy group that analyzes flight data. There were 46 flights to Colombia, 42 to Ecuador and 12 to Peru, a relatively small number considering that tens of thousands of people enter irregularly from those countries every month.

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A migrant from Mexico speaks with a Border Patrol agent before being transported in a van to be processed for asylum, Wednesday, June 5, 2024, near Dulzura, California. Photo: Gregory Bull, AP

During that period there were only 10 deportation flights to Africa, which has become a major source of immigration to the United States. There was only one to China, despite the arrests of almost 13,000 Chinese immigrants.

Mexico is the easiest country for deportations because it’s just a matter of driving to the nearest border crossing, but Mexicans accounted for fewer than three in 10 border arrests in the government’s last fiscal year, down from nine in 10 in 2010. Mexico also receives 30 thousand people a month from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela, countries that have limited capacity or willingness to welcome their people back.

Some countries refuse to accept flights to avoid being overwhelmed, Corey Price, then ICE’s director of enforcement and deportation operations, said in an interview last year.

“We have no control in this,” said Price, who retired last month. “We didn’t unilaterally decide, ‘OK, we’ll send your citizen back.’ No, that country has to accept them back.”

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