Los Angeles Times

U.S. expands CBP asylum app’s access in Mexico

Migrants in southern states bordering Guatemala can now request appointmen­ts.

- By Edgar H. Clemente and María Verza

CIUDAD HIDALGO, Mexico — As soon as she stepped onto Mexican soil last week, Venezuelan migrant Yuri Carolina Meléndez downloaded the U.S. government’s app to apply for asylum appointmen­ts.

The CBP One app has been around, but as of Friday, migrants in Mexico’s southernmo­st states bordering Guatemala will be able to apply for appointmen­ts. Previously, they had to be in central or northern Mexico.

“I have to wait to see if it really works,” Meléndez said while resting under a tree with her 16- and 18-year-old daughters along a border highway leading to the city of Tapachula last week.

Mexico has been asking the U.S. to expand the app’s access to the south in an attempt to relieve the pressure migrants feel to continue north to at least Mexico City. In recent years, the Mexican government has tried to contain migrants in the south farther from the U.S. border, but the lack of work opportunit­ies and housing in southern cities like Tapachula have pushed migrants north.

Mexico hopes that if migrants can wait for their appointmen­ts in the south, they might be at less risk of being preyed on by organized crime groups.

Germin Alemán, a 31year-old from Honduras traveling with his wife and three children, planned to register as soon as they reached Tapachula. “We’re going to apply here. We’re going to wait for the appointmen­t,” he said as they walked from the border toward Tapachula.

Others, however, still felt the pressure to get farther north. Many migrants carry big debts and need to start paying them off as soon as possible. Meléndez, for instance, said she planned to keep moving to improve her chances of finding work.

CBP One has been one of the measures of greatest impact in U.S. efforts to bring order to the growing demand for U.S. asylum along its southweste­rn border. In the 2023 fiscal year, U.S. Customs and Border Protection reported more than 2.4 million encounters with migrants along the border.

Since the app was launched in January 2023, more than 765,000 people have scheduled appointmen­ts to request asylum. Immigratio­n is a central issue in the U.S. presidenti­al election.

When the Biden administra­tion in June temporaril­y suspended the asylum process for those who crossed illegally, the app became one of the only ways to request asylum. The U.S. handles 1,500 appointmen­ts daily.

The number of migrants crossing the U.S. border illegally has fallen significan­tly since the peak in December 2023. The administra­tion attributes much of that decline to Mexico’s enforcemen­t efforts, which include catching migrants in the north and sending them south again.

Still, Mexico welcomes CBP One’s expansion.

“That is going to help us a lot,” Foreign Affairs Secretary Alicia Bárcena said this month when she announced the expansion was coming. Immigratio­n is a key issue in the U.S.-Mexico relationsh­ip.

But for dozens of nongovernm­ental groups that advocate for migrants and human rights, there is little to celebrate.

In an open letter to the Mexican government Thursday, they called CBP One “a violation of internatio­nal law” because it allows the U.S. to limit access to its territory for people in need of protection.

The groups argued that many migrants wind up stuck in Mexico for months waiting in full shelters or camping in unsanitary conditions. While they wait, they are vulnerable to kidnapping, sexual assaults, torture and extortion by criminals and authoritie­s, the groups said.

In theory, Mexico’s National Institute of Migration allows migrants with CBP One appointmen­ts to travel freely to the U.S. border, but the organizati­ons said authoritie­s still sometimes detain migrants and send them south again to keep them from the border.

The institute did not respond to a request for comment about those allegation­s.

In southern Mexico, migrants have always been targets of smugglers and criminals, but the region was quite peaceful for the rest of its inhabitant­s. Now the situation has changed. The southern border region is locked in a territoria­l struggle between Mexico’s most powerful drug cartels, which want to control routes for smuggling drugs, weapons and migrants. Violence is part of daily life in a lot of border towns.

Among migrants waiting in Ciudad Hidalgo’s central plaza near the Suchiate River that divides Mexico and Guatemala, the question remains whether to wait or to keep moving north.

As a group of migrants debated the answer, the factor that weighed most heavily was money. The migrants had heard the chances of finding jobs are higher in central and northern Mexico, and money is needed for what could be a monthslong wait for an appointmen­t.

“If there are work opportunit­ies, we’ll stay. If not, we’ll keep advancing until they give us an appointmen­t,” said Yuleidi Banqué, a 28-year-old Venezuelan who had just arrived in Mexico with her partner and her 7-year-old daughter.

“My daughter isn’t well. … She’s fed through a feeding tube. We need help,” Banqué said.

The Office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees, known as UNHCR, is cautious about CBP One’s expansion.

Giovanni Lepri, the Mexico chief for UNHCR, said it could mean fewer risks for migrants headed north. But he added that dealing with migration requires diverse measures, “those like stabilizin­g the countries of origin, protection in the transit countries and options for regulariza­tion and asylum in destinatio­n countries.”

For Noemí Ramírez, a 47year-old from El Salvador, hearing that she could begin her asylum applicatio­n from Mexico’s Chiapas state led her to set off immediatel­y for Tapachula with her 19-yearold daughter.

“We’re going to wait until we get an appointmen­t. I’m not thinking of going any farther,” she said as they walked, worrying about the violence they could face along the way. “I’m not going to risk it with my daughter. We’re alone.”

Associated Press writers Clemente and Verza reported from Ciudad Hidalgo and Mexico City, respective­ly.

 ?? Edgar H. Clemente Associated Press ?? MIGRANTS walk north along the highway through Suchiate, in Mexico’s southern Chiapas state, last month.
Edgar H. Clemente Associated Press MIGRANTS walk north along the highway through Suchiate, in Mexico’s southern Chiapas state, last month.

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