At the US-Mexican border, migrants give up hope of crossing

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CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico, Dec 22, 2019 (AFP) – In muddy makeshift camps in the
Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez, more than 1,000 migrants had waited for
weeks for a chance to request asylum in the United States, enduring cold
nights and long days of uncertainty.

Frustrated, many are giving up and clearing out.

Authorities say as of last week, there were still about 1,400 migrants,
most of them from southwestern Mexico, holding out hope under tents and tarps
not far from the Rio Grande.

But on Thursday, only about 700 remained. The others grew tired of the
near-freezing temperatures at night and the seemingly fruitless quest to be
heard by US officials.

Local associations convinced several families to head to shelters or hotels
when the mercury started to plummet.

Some instead made their way across the river, without any idea if they
would succeed.

And still others opted to remain — they are afraid to lose their place on
the murky wait list system they themselves created to convince US border
agents to take them in order of their arrival.

“They won’t let us proceed unless we hand them our slips to show them we
have indeed been waiting,” said Rosa, who keeps up the list on a daily basis.

Every night, the men and women at the camp keep watch on the comings and
goings on the bridge crossing the Rio Grande — the natural, international
border — to make sure new arrivals don’t jump the queue.

– ‘The cartels threatened us’ –

According to a survey recently led by several universities in northern
Mexico, 60 percent of displaced people in camps wait their turn in tents, but
more than a quarter are sleeping in the open air.

Many migrants say they are fleeing violence in their hometowns.

“The cartels threatened us and took our land,” said one man from Guerrero
state.

“At first, they asked us for money,” he explained. “But when we could no
longer pay, they took our house. They gave us two weeks” to get out, he
added.

Officials in Ciudad Juarez — once known as the “murder capital of the
world” — are trying to be flexible about the influx of migrants.

“We understand that US authorities administratively can’t process all of
these requests,” said Enrique Valenzuela, who works for a Chihuahua state
agency tasked with local population issues.

“Most of these people are alleged victims in some way,” he said.

“They say that they either have been threatened for some reason —
themselves or their families — or they have either lost a loved one or a
neighbor,” he added.

“We cannot impede their entrance and it would be wrong for us to do so.”