Saturday, September 21, 2024
HomeOpinionThe Southern border crisis needs a humanitarian response

The Southern border crisis needs a humanitarian response

Published on

spot_img


“Where are all the migrants?” we asked as we toured Juárez, Anapra, El Paso and Sunland Park on May 10 and 11.

Our first stop was the Sacred Heart church on Oregon Street in El Paso where there were far fewer people on the streets than when I had last visited on April 28.

Then we crossed into Juárez to the site of the deadly fire that killed 40 migrants on March 27 where we spoke to a 16 year old girl named Ana who had made the arduous journey from Venezuela with her father and her younger sister,  Fatima, age 12. They left Venezuela eight months ago, crossed the very dangerous Darien Gap, traveled with a small group instead of hiring a “coyote” because that would have been too expensive. They had spent two months in the Mexican government’s Kiki Romero shelter in Juárez, a former gymnasium converted to shelter up to 200 people but said it was so horrible that they decided to live on the street in a tent. Their hope is for an asylum hearing soon and they certainly deserve it.

We then took food and clothing to the nearby Respettrans shelter. They were housing roughly 200 migrants and there had been no additional influx due to Title 42.

We toured both the US and the Mexican sides of the border wall to the west in the Sunland Park-Anapra area and eastward to the Zaragoza bridge, spotted a few migrants on the Mexican side but no build up.

Texas National Guardsmen stand along a stretch of razor wire as a migrant woman carrying a child tries to cross into the U.S, on the banks of the Rio Grande, as seen from Matamoros, Mexico, Thursday, May 11, 2023. Migrants rushed across the Mexico border Thursday in hopes of entering the U.S. in the final hours before pandemic-related asylum restrictions are lifted. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)
Texas National Guardsmen stand along a stretch of razor wire as a migrant woman carrying a child tries to cross into the U.S, on the banks of the Rio Grande, as seen from Matamoros, Mexico, Thursday, May 11. (Fernando Llano/The Associated Press)

On Thursday we took food, clothing and medical supplies to Sacred Heart but there were only about 45 migrants there, far fewer than two weeks earlier.

See also  Don’t let Gaza refugees be used as a weapon

Later we returned to Juárez and spent several hours driving around in the city center but saw nothing out of the ordinary.

In short, ending Title 42 didn’t cause any of the chaos that was predicted.

After years of working and volunteering on the Southern border, I have some conclusions and recommendations.

We’ll continue to have a need for migrant shelters and it’s time, therefore, to set standards, support the non-profits like Respettrans that are humane and cost effective, force improvements in shelters like the Kiki Romero. Thus, I continue to recommend the creation of a US-Mexico Shelter Task Force that would include the involvement of those who run the non-profits.

Since September 2022, I’ve had extensive contact with hundreds of Venezuelan migrants often in very harsh circumstances as when they were living in terrible conditions on the riverbank in Juárez across from El Paso. They have always displayed great optimism and courtesy and many would be assets to our economy if we had an expanded guest worker program to would work for them. Now there are about 4 million unfilled jobs in the US for which we have no workers.

FILE - Migrants who crossed the border from Mexico into the U.S. wait next to the U.S. border wall where U.S. Border Patrol agents stand guard, seen from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, March 30, 2023. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano, File)
Migrants who crossed the border from Mexico into the U.S. wait next to the border wall where U.S. Border Patrol agents stand guard, near Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on March 30. (Fernando Llano, Associated Press file)

Conditions in countries like Venezuela aren’t going to suddenly improve so we can’t just focus on migration when there’s an event like Title 42 and then forget about it.



Source link

Latest articles

Lost cat makes 900-mile journey back home to California from Yellowstone

A husband and wife in California who thought their cat was gone...

Hormone replacement was the answer for women, until it wasn’t – San Diego Union-Tribune

Women will spend approximately one-third of their lives after the menopause transition and...

How Intel Fell From Global Chip Champion to Takeover Target

Strategic missteps and the artificial intelligence boom have combined to reshape the fortunes...

Langley, unburdened by the past, moves to 4-0 for first time since 1986

After their head coach was arrested just weeks before the start of this...

More like this

Lost cat makes 900-mile journey back home to California from Yellowstone

A husband and wife in California who thought their cat was gone...

Hormone replacement was the answer for women, until it wasn’t – San Diego Union-Tribune

Women will spend approximately one-third of their lives after the menopause transition and...

How Intel Fell From Global Chip Champion to Takeover Target

Strategic missteps and the artificial intelligence boom have combined to reshape the fortunes...