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	<title>Refugee casualties - Garner Ted Armstrong Evangelistic Association</title>
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	<title>Refugee casualties - Garner Ted Armstrong Evangelistic Association</title>
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		<title>The U.S. Immigration System May Have Reached a Breaking Point</title>
		<link>https://www.garnertedarmstrong.org/the-u-s-immigration-system-may-have-reached-a-breaking-point/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=the-u-s-immigration-system-may-have-reached-a-breaking-point</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Michael D. Shear, Miriam Jordan and Manny Fernandez]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Apr 2019 13:57:10 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Refugee Crisis America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Border Patrol]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Customs and Border Protection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Illegal immigration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Immigration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Migrants]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Refugee casualties]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Refugee crisis-America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[refugees]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[United States]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>For years, there have been warnings that America’s immigration system was going to fail. That time may be now. Migrants in Matamoros, Mexico, line up for food donations last week as they waited to cross into Brownsville, Tex.CreditCreditIlana Panich-Linsman for &#8230; <a class="kt-excerpt-readmore" href="https://www.garnertedarmstrong.org/the-u-s-immigration-system-may-have-reached-a-breaking-point/" aria-label="The U.S. Immigration System May Have Reached a Breaking Point">Read More</a></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.garnertedarmstrong.org/the-u-s-immigration-system-may-have-reached-a-breaking-point/">The U.S. Immigration System May Have Reached a Breaking Point</a> first appeared on <a href="https://www.garnertedarmstrong.org">Garner Ted Armstrong Evangelistic Association</a>.</p>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For years, there have been warnings that America’s immigration system was going to fail. That time may be now.</p>
<p><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="" src="https://static01.nyt.com/images/2019/04/11/us/11immigration1/merlin_153000678_ca3b01fb-b01a-426c-8b7d-1a398e94d6cb-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&amp;auto=webp&amp;disable=upscale" width="806" height="537" /><br />
<span class="css-1f9pvn2 us">Migrants in Matamoros, Mexico, line up for food donations last week as they waited to cross into Brownsville, Tex.</span><span class="emkp2hg2 css-1nwzsjy e1z0qqy90"><span class="css-1ly73wi e1tej78p0">Credit</span><span class="css-1dv1kvn">Credit</span>Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times</span></p>
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<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">[<em class="css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0">Read the </em><a class="css-1g7m0tk" title="" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/05/us/mexico-border-trump.html?rref=collection%2Fseriescollection%2Fcrossing-the-border&amp;action=click&amp;contentCollection=us&amp;region=stream&amp;module=inline&amp;version=latest&amp;contentPlacement=1&amp;pgtype=collection"><em class="css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0">latest edition of Crossing the Border</em></a><em class="css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0">, a limited-run newsletter about life where the United States and Mexico meet. </em><a class="css-1g7m0tk" title="" href="https://www.nytimes.com/newsletters/crossing-the-border?module=inline"><em class="css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0">Sign up here to receive the next issue</em></a><em class="css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0"> in your inbox.</em>]
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">SAN YSIDRO, Calif. — It was never like this before.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">The migrants come now in the middle of the night or in the bright light of day. Men and women arrive by the hundreds, caked with dirt, with teens and toddlers in tow. They jump the small fences in remote parts of Texas, and they gather on the hot pavement at the main border crossing in California. Tired and fearful, they look for the one thing that they pray will allow them to stay in the United States, at least for a while: a Border Patrol agent.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">Gone are the days when young, strong men waited on the Tijuana River levees for their chance to wade across the water, evade capture and find work for the summer. These days, thousands of people a day simply walk up to the border and surrender. Most of them are from Central America, seeking to escape from gang violence, sexual abuse, death threats and persistent poverty. The smugglers have told them they will be quickly released, as long as they bring a child, and that they will be allowed to remain in the United States for years while they pursue their asylum cases.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">The very nature of immigration to America changed after 2014, when families first began showing up in large numbers. The resulting crisis has overwhelmed a system unable to detain, care for and quickly decide the fate of tens of thousands of people who claim to be fleeing for their lives. For years, both political parties have tried — and failed — to overhaul the nation’s immigration laws, mindful that someday the government would reach a breaking point.</p>
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<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">That moment has arrived. The country is now unable to provide either the necessary humanitarian relief for desperate migrants or even basic controls on the number and nature of who is entering the United States.</p>
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Migrants seeking to turn themselves in to Border Patrol agents wait behind a portion of the U.S.-Mexico border fence in El Paso.CreditTamir Kalifa for The New York Times</p>
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<p>The immigration courts now have more than 800,000 pending cases; each one takes an average of 700 days to process. And because laws and court rulings aimed at protecting children prohibit jailing young people for more than 20 days, families are often simply released. They are dropped off at downtown bus stations in places like Brownsville, Tex., where dozens last week sat on gray metal benches, most without money or even laces on their shoes, heading for destinations across the United States.</p>
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<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">At the current pace of nearly 100,000 migrants each month, officials say more than a million people will have tried to cross the border in a 12-month period. Some of those arriving today will have a strong legal case to stay under international refugee treaties and federal asylum laws, but most won’t have a formal asylum hearing until 2021.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">The flow of migrant families has reached record levels, with February totals 560 percent above those for the same period last year. As many as 27,000 children are expected to cross the border and enter the immigration enforcement system in April alone. So crowded are border facilities that some of the nearly 3,500 migrants in custody in El Paso <a class="css-1g7m0tk" title="" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/31/us/el-paso-bridge-migrants.html?module=inline">were herded earlier this month</a> under a bridge, behind razor wire.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">In recent days, officials have grasped for ever-more-dire ways to describe the situation: “operational emergency”; “unsustainable”; “system wide meltdown.”</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">One top official said simply: “The system is on fire.”</p>
<h2 id="link-52dc2e7c" class="css-sbs9ef eoo0vm40">An ineffective ‘not welcome’ message</h2>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">For President Trump, the situation at the border has generated red-hot fury. It erupted again on Sunday as he abruptly forced out Kirstjen Nielsen, his long-embattled homeland security secretary, for what he considered her failure to put an end to the surge of migrants.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">In recent days, the president has landed on a dark new message that, if taken literally, could mean an end to all immigration — legal and illegal — across the Mexican border.</p>
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<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">The immigration courts now have more than 800,000 pending cases; each one takes an average of 700 days to process. And because laws and court rulings aimed at protecting children prohibit jailing young people for more than 20 days, families are often simply released. They are dropped off at downtown bus stations in places like Brownsville, Tex., where dozens last week sat on gray metal benches, most without money or even laces on their shoes, heading for destinations across the United States.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">At the current pace of nearly 100,000 migrants each month, officials say more than a million people will have tried to cross the border in a 12-month period. Some of those arriving today will have a strong legal case to stay under international refugee treaties and federal asylum laws, but most won’t have a formal asylum hearing until 2021.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">The flow of migrant families has reached record levels, with February totals 560 percent above those for the same period last year. As many as 27,000 children are expected to cross the border and enter the immigration enforcement system in April alone. So crowded are border facilities that some of the nearly 3,500 migrants in custody in El Paso <a class="css-1g7m0tk" title="" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/31/us/el-paso-bridge-migrants.html?module=inline">were herded earlier this month</a> under a bridge, behind razor wire.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="" src="https://static01.nyt.com/images/2019/04/10/us/10immigration3/merlin_153000591_6be33b5c-867c-4933-b609-e220976260bb-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&amp;auto=webp&amp;disable=upscale" width="839" height="559" /><br />
At the bus station in Brownsville, Tex., city officials took over a section of empty counter space to manage the intake of migrants, who wait in line after being dropped off by ICE.CreditIlana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times</p>
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<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">“The system is full,” the president said in California on Friday, standing in front of the rusting iron slats of the border wall that he wants to expand for hundreds of miles across the country’s southern border. “Whether it’s asylum, whether it’s anything you want, it’s illegal immigration. We can’t take you anymore.”</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">Yet, perversely, the president’s own anti-immigrant rhetoric has helped supercharge the pipeline of migrants from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador. Smugglers lately have been buying radio ads in Central America, warning that Mr. Trump is about to shut down all immigration. If you ever want to go to the United States, they say, go now!</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">“They said they would take us by bus. We would be safe,” said Jeremias Pascoal, 16, who crossed into Texas earlier this month after paying $3,200 for a “guide” who showed his group to a road where he said they could surrender to the Border Patrol.</p>
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<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">Experts say the president is not wrong when he says that “legal loopholes” in America’s immigration system are partly responsible for encouraging migrants to bring children like Jeremias on a dangerous journey that in some cases ends in tragedy. In December, <a class="css-1g7m0tk" title="" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/15/us/migrant-girl-border-patrol-jakelin.html?module=inline">two migrant children died</a> in Customs and Border Protection custody after becoming gravely ill during their trip. Officials warn that <a class="css-1g7m0tk" title="" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/05/us/border-patrol-deaths-migrant-children.html?module=inline">more deaths are likely</a>.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">Christopher Cabrera, a vice president of the local union of Border Patrol agents in the Rio Grande Valley in South Texas, pulled out his phone last week and scrolled through dozens of pictures he has taken out in the field: Groups of more than 100 people turning themselves in at night; seriously ill children huddled on the ground, being given medical aid.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">“The majority of our agents get sick. Infectious disease is everywhere,” Mr. Cabrera said, including in the Border Patrol’s migrant processing center. “There’s always scabies in there. Usually we have chickenpox. We have tuberculosis in there. You name it, it’s probably been through that building. So it’s dangerous. It’s dangerous for our agents. It’s dangerous for the detainees that don’t have anything.”</p>
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<div class="css-1tr2b5x ehw59r13">A volunteer physician assistant examines a sick Guatemalan teenager in the medical clinic at Casa Oscar Romero, a migrant shelter in El Paso.CreditTamir Kalifa for The New York Times</p>
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<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">But the president has not chosen to prioritize a surge of new resources to the border, which could help ease the overcrowding and suffering that have gripped the migrants and the border communities where they arrive. Instead, Mr. Trump has insisted on simply trying to stop people from getting into the country in the first place — a policy of deterrence that not only has failed but has made the problem worse.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">In an effort to send a “you’re not welcome” message, the administration has tried a series of strategies: prosecuting everyone who crosses illegally, taking their children from them, tightening asylum standards, slowing down the number of people allowed to apply for asylum each day, forcing asylum applicants to remain in Mexico while they wait for court dates.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">In some cases, this approach has proved too cruel for the American public to tolerate and has run up against the protections enshrined in the Constitution, which the courts have decided protect migrants as well as citizens. Some of the president’s agenda has been blocked by Congress or the courts. None of it has fixed the problem.</p>
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<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">To the contrary, these policies have <a class="css-1g7m0tk" title="" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/29/us/border-wall-crossings.html?module=inline">forced migrants to divert</a> from well-staffed border stations like the one in San Ysidro, Calif., where agents deliberately slowed down the number of migrants they would allow to cross each day, toward remote areas of West Texas and New Mexico, where the two migrant children died in December.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">And the administration has done little to speed up the immigration courts, though that could be just the deterrent the president has sought.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">“The backlog has been allowed to build to the point of a crisis,” said Doris Meissner, the immigration commissioner in the Clinton administration and now a fellow at the Migration Policy Institute. “They do not accept the basic proposition that this is a population where there are people qualified for protection and that enabling the systems we have is an answer.”</p>
<h2 id="link-5986e5d9" class="css-sbs9ef eoo0vm40">Seeking asylum, with children</h2>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">In a series of international human rights agreements, beginning with the <a class="css-1g7m0tk" title="" href="http://www.unhcr.org/en-us/protection/basic/3b66c2aa10/convention-protocol-relating-status-refugees.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees</a>, nations agreed to allow anyone to seek asylum, even if they entered a country illegally. The agreements defined a refugee as someone with a well-founded fear of persecution based on “race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.”</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">Determining whether an applicant receives asylum was left up to individual nations, but in the United States, the international obligations and the standards for asylum were largely incorporated into American immigration law beginning with the Refugee Act of 1980.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">Only about 20 percent of asylum seekers ultimately win the right to live and work in the United States by proving that they would face persecution in their home countries. Just wanting a better job doesn’t qualify. Applicants have the burden to show evidence of past persecution or compelling testimony that establishes the “well-founded” fear that they would face danger if they return home.</p>
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<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">Some have won asylum, for example, by proving that their membership in a religious minority singles them out for harassment or threats. In the past, women suffering domestic abuse have qualified, as have some victims targeted by gangs. Generalized fear of violence does not qualify. Neither does poverty.</p>
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<p id="interactive-headline" class="css-1su19vv interactive-headline">The asylum process begins with a “credible fear” screening to see if an applicant is likely to succeed in the first place.</p>
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<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">Out of nearly 100,000 credible fear interviews during the year that ended in September of 2018, an asylum officer confirmed a credible fear 74,677 times — a nearly 75 percent approval rate. A senior Trump administration official vowed on Tuesday to dramatically reduce that rate by making the standards tougher.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">But it is what happens after the credible fear interview that is at the heart of America’s bitter immigration debate.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">In 2017, 11,292 immigrants who had been released on bond or on their own recognizance were ordered deported because they failed to show up for their immigration proceedings, a 26 percent increase over the previous year, according to <a class="css-1g7m0tk" title="" href="https://www.justice.gov/opa/press-release/file/1060936/download?utm_medium=email&amp;utm_source=govdelivery" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Justice Department data</a>.</p>
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Migrants gathered outside of a motel in El Paso where they are being housed by a local nonprofit.CreditTamir Kalifa for The New York Times</p>
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<p>Blanca Vasquez, who fled Honduras after gangs killed her husband and torched their home, passed a credible fear interview at the border in 2013. She was released and settled in northern Texas, where she got a janitorial job and waited for her day in court. About a year later, she said, she unintentionally missed her first hearing and was most likely ordered deported for failing to appear.</p>
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<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">She’s not sure, because she stopped going to court at all. “I got confused,” she said. “I ask God to look after me. There are too many problems in my country; I want to stay here.”</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">Maria Perez, a Honduran who joined a caravan with her 8-year-old son, Yunior, in November, waited two months in Tijuana for the chance to apply for asylum after her son’s father was killed by a man who continued to threaten her family. When her number — 1,506 — was finally called, she and her son were soon released to await their court hearings under the juvenile protection laws. She lives now with a friend in Northern California, but she does not have a lawyer and isn’t sure how to proceed with her case.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">“I am very worried. I don’t know what to do,” she said.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">Families like Ms. Perez and her son are the biggest targets of Mr. Trump’s fury. The president and his aides blame the nation’s immigration laws — the president derisively calls them “Democrat laws” — for creating an incentive for migrants to bring a child with them to improve their chances of getting into the United States.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">One of them is the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act, a 2008 bill signed into law by President George W. Bush that requires immigration authorities to treat migrant children differently than they do adults. The other is a 1997 legal settlement in a case known as Flores, which prevents the government from holding children or families in secure detention facilities for longer than 20 days.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">It was trying to get around those legal limits that prompted the administration last spring to begin forcibly separating migrant children from their parents — detaining parents indefinitely while sending children to shelters and foster care. The fierce political backlash forced Mr. Trump to abandon that approach.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">The president’s most recent initiative was the one calling for many migrants to remain in Mexico for the months or years it could take for an American judge to hear their case; that policy, too, <a class="css-1g7m0tk" title="" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/08/us/politics/trump-asylum-seekers-federal-judge.html?module=inline">ran afoul of the courts</a> when a federal judge in California blocked its implementation.</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="" src="https://static01.nyt.com/images/2019/04/10/us/10immigration6/merlin_153019710_cc175e0f-b543-420e-a177-d5f635bedc3a-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&amp;auto=webp&amp;disable=upscale" width="832" height="556" /><br />
A young boy clings to his mother as they wait in a line of asylum seekers at the bus station in San Antonio.CreditCallaghan O&#8217;Hare for The New York Times</p>
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<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">For some migrants, the policy effectively meant no asylum case at all.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">Miguel Aquino, 29, who fled El Salvador in a caravan in October after being shot in the leg and hand by MS-13 gang members, waited for weeks in Tijuana to apply for asylum at the sprawling San Ysidro port, the biggest on the border. He was interviewed and sent back to Mexico to wait for a court date.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">In March, when he arrived for a preliminary hearing without an attorney, the judge gave him more time to find one — and sent him back to Mexico to wait. Mr. Aquino said he has called eight lawyers, and they all said they couldn’t represent him because he is in Tijuana. At this point, he is tired of waiting.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">“The next time, if I don’t go with a lawyer and they don’t give a clear answer,” he said, “I’m going to look for another way to get in.”</p>
<h2 id="link-6d648283" class="css-sbs9ef eoo0vm40">The source of the problem</h2>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">Mr. Trump often says he plans to build a wall on the border with Mexico to halt illegal immigration. But when the standoff over funding for the wall led to a 35-day government shutdown in December and January, it actually made things worse. Many immigration judges were furloughed, and tens of thousands of deportation and asylum cases <a class="css-1g7m0tk" title="" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/04/us/government-shutdown-courts-prisons.html?module=inline">were delayed</a>, in some cases for years.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">There is another problem with the wall: Slowing the exodus of migrants from Central America would need to start in those countries first.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">Central America’s economies are still weak, and residents face drug and gang violence at levels largely unseen in other countries. Many are subject to deep poverty, a situation that recently reached a crisis with the collapse of coffee, corn and maize crops.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">M.C., a 23-year-old Guatemalan woman who asked to be identified by her initials for safety reasons, received an anonymous letter recently in her hometown, San Marcos, warning her that she would be killed if she did not give the letter writers 65,000 Guatemalan quetzals, nearly $8,500.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">M.C., who is three and a half months pregnant, went to the police in San Marcos. Then she got a second letter, warning her to never go to the police again. After she received a third letter, she made the decision to leave for the United States.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">“I didn’t want to come here at first, but then I think it’s the best thing for the baby,” M.C. said as she sat in a migrant shelter in the South Texas border city of Brownsville. “Here, he’s going to grow without crime. He can go to school.”</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">American diplomats say the best way to confront that kind of lawlessness is with the hundreds of millions of dollars in foreign aid that has been flowing to Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras for several years, designed to bolster the rule of law and improve the economy.</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class="" src="https://static01.nyt.com/images/2019/04/10/us/10immigration7/10immigration7-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&amp;auto=webp&amp;disable=upscale" width="863" height="575" /></p>
<p>At the Good Neighbor Settlement House in Brownsville, migrants rest, exhausted, after a meal. CreditIlana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times</p>
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<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">But blaming other countries and painting those coming across the border from Mexico as a national security threat has never failed to animate Mr. Trump’s core supporters — the ones who helped deliver him the White House in 2016.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">“It’s an invasion,” Mr. Trump declared in February, after Congress denied him money to build a wall. “We have an invasion of drugs and criminals coming into our country.”</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0">In fact, the migrants are mostly victims of the broken immigration system. They are not, by and large, killers, rapists or gang members. Most do not carry drugs. They have learned how to make asylum claims, just as the law allows them to do. And nearly all of them are scared — of being shipped off to Mexico, separated from their children, sent to prison. Scared, especially, of going home.</p>
<p class="css-1ygdjhk evys1bk0"><em class="css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0">Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Caitlin Dickerson contributed reporting.<br />
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<p>Source: <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/10/us/immigration-border-mexico.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/10/us/immigration-border-mexico.html</a></p>
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</div><p>The post <a href="https://www.garnertedarmstrong.org/the-u-s-immigration-system-may-have-reached-a-breaking-point/">The U.S. Immigration System May Have Reached a Breaking Point</a> first appeared on <a href="https://www.garnertedarmstrong.org">Garner Ted Armstrong Evangelistic Association</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Libyan Refugee Crisis—EU Must Take Responsibility and Alter Its Migrant Policy</title>
		<link>https://www.garnertedarmstrong.org/libyan-refugee-crisis-eu-must-take-responsibility-and-alter-its-migrant-policy/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=libyan-refugee-crisis-eu-must-take-responsibility-and-alter-its-migrant-policy</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Sajid Farid Shapoo ]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Apr 2018 08:06:41 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Refugee Crisis Europe]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Amnesty International]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arab Spring]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[European Union (EU)]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Frontex (EU border agency)]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Libya]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Libyan border patrol]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Libyan immigration camps]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Libyan refugee crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Middle East]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Migrant Offshore Aid Station (MOAS)]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Operation Mare Nostrum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Operation Sophia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Operation Triton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Refugee]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Refugee casualties]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Status of Refugees]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR)]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Universal Declaration of Human Rights]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>The European Union&#8217;s relief efforts must not contribute to the subjugation of the asylum seekers and deny them their basic human and legal rights. The world seems to be slowly coming to terms with the Libyan refugee crisis. Despite the &#8230; <a class="kt-excerpt-readmore" href="https://www.garnertedarmstrong.org/libyan-refugee-crisis-eu-must-take-responsibility-and-alter-its-migrant-policy/" aria-label="Libyan Refugee Crisis—EU Must Take Responsibility and Alter Its Migrant Policy">Read More</a></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.garnertedarmstrong.org/libyan-refugee-crisis-eu-must-take-responsibility-and-alter-its-migrant-policy/">Libyan Refugee Crisis—EU Must Take Responsibility and Alter Its Migrant Policy</a> first appeared on <a href="https://www.garnertedarmstrong.org">Garner Ted Armstrong Evangelistic Association</a>.</p>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="first-image-wrapper"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" title="The world seems to be slowly coming to terms with the Libyan refugee crisis. Despite the loss of over five hundred migrant lives in the Mediterranean sea in the first three months of 2018, the issue has failed to occupy the media spaces in the way it had in the previous years. The appalling revelations of torture, slavery, and exploitation of tens of thousands of refugees and migrants detained in Libyan immigration camps in horrific conditions in November 2017 caused an international outrage. These migrant camps, run by various EU funded governmental and nongovernmental entities, have rightly been called “the living hell on Earth” due to their deplorable living conditions. The Amnesty International reported that European governments were knowingly “complicit” in the torture and exploitation of tens of thousands of displaced persons, both internal and international. Surprisingly, the human-rights watchers saw hope in these shameful revelations—that perhaps the global outrage might force the EU and its member c" src="http://nationalinterest.org/files/styles/main_image_on_posts/public/main_images/rsz_rtx1ndxa.jpg?itok=W_-MFEzW" alt="The world seems to be slowly coming to terms with the Libyan refugee crisis. Despite the loss of over five hundred migrant lives in the Mediterranean sea in the first three months of 2018, the issue has failed to occupy the media spaces in the way it had in the previous years. The appalling revelations of torture, slavery, and exploitation of tens of thousands of refugees and migrants detained in Libyan immigration camps in horrific conditions in November 2017 caused an international outrage. These migrant " width="1200" height="799" /></div>
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The European Union&#8217;s relief efforts must not contribute to the subjugation of the asylum seekers and deny them their basic human and legal rights.</p>
<p>The world seems to be slowly coming to terms with the Libyan refugee crisis. Despite the loss of over five hundred migrant lives in the Mediterranean sea in the first three months of 2018, the issue has failed to occupy the media spaces in the way it had in the previous years.</p>
<p>The appalling revelations of torture, slavery, and exploitation of tens of thousands of refugees and migrants detained in Libyan immigration camps in horrific conditions in November 2017 caused an international outrage.</p>
<p>These migrant camps, run by various EU funded governmental and nongovernmental entities, have <a href="https://www.refugeesinternational.org/reports/2017/libya" target="_blank" rel="noopener">rightly been called</a> “the living hell on Earth” due to their deplorable living conditions. The Amnesty International reported that European governments were knowingly “<a href="https://www.refugeesinternational.org/reports/2017/libya" target="_blank" rel="noopener">complicit</a>” in the torture and exploitation of tens of thousands of displaced persons, both internal and international.</p>
<p>Surprisingly, the human-rights watchers saw hope in these shameful revelations—that perhaps the global outrage might force the EU and its member countries to take effective and decisive steps to ameliorate the conditions and sufferings of the refugees and migrants. However, with every passing day that hope is fading away and so are the chances of bringing an early end to this colossal humanitarian crisis.</p>
<p><strong>Crisis and the EU Response</strong></p>
<p>The present refugee crisis originates from a number of spiraling crises in Africa and the Middle East which gathered momentum after the Arab Spring. By the end of 2016 about 4.8 million<a href="https://www.brookings.edu/blog/future-development/2017/09/07/syrian-refugees-and-the-slow-march-to-acceptance/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> displaced persons</a> were already registered as refugees in EU member states and Turkey. Libya, with its own huge internally and internationally displaced population, also serves as the<a href="https://www.mdx.ac.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0023/409055/EVI-MED-first-report-final-15-June-2017.pdf?bustCache=885776" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> primary transit route</a> to Europe for hundreds of thousands of migrants and asylum seekers. The refugees hail from many north, central and western African countries like Niger, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Sudan, Ethiopia and Egypt—and they are all fleeing wars and repressive governments. Libya, as the main transit point for refugees from other sub-Saharan and West African countries, is currently hosting more than forty thousand refugees and asylum seekers.</p>
<p>As a reaction to this unprecedented mass movement of refugees, the EU border agency, Frontex, began Operation Triton and Operation Sophia in November 2014, which both have the objective of safeguarding the EU borders and deter asylum seekers from crossing the Mediterranean. Search-and-rescue efforts like that of <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2015/04/20/italy-ran-an-operation-that-save-thousands-of-migrants-from-drowning-in-the-mediterranean-why-did-it-stop/?utm_term=.81ad4e70c3db" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Operation Mare Nostrum</a>, which ended in 2014, were not a part of these efforts. During the first two years, neither of the operations succeeded in reducing the number of vessels attempting to cross the Mediterranean. One argument for the failed operations was the misguided assumption that military force can act as an effective<a href="https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-3-319-57565-0_13" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> deterrence for migration</a>without also addressing the root causes that triggers the original migrations. Between January 2015 and June 2017, according to UNHCR, more than<a href="http://missingmigrants.iom.int/region/mediterranean" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> 11,200 refugees</a> were killed in mid-sea disasters in the Mediterranean. This was a significant increase from previous years.</p>
<p>Yet, surprisingly, from June 2017 onwards, there was a<a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/the-mysterious-drop-in-the-number-of-migrants-crossing-the-mediterranean/2017/08/31/1e50598e-8cfc-11e7-9c53-6a169beb0953_story.html?utm_term=.418c97f638f3" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> significant drop</a> in the number of refugee boats trying to cross the Mediterranean. The cause of this mysterious drop had more to do with unprecedented activities on the Libyan side of the Mediterranean. The Libyan coast guards flushed with EU funds and equipment were forcibly preventing asylum seekers from leaving the Libyan shores. This newly established financial partnership with Libyan agencies to enhance border control in the country managed to reduce the number of boats leaving the Libyan borders for Europe. However, this new EU policy, focusing on preventing refugees from leaving the shores of Libya, has brought with it a string of unfortunate side effects.</p>
<p><strong>Exporting the Responsibility and its Repercussions</strong></p>
<p>The EU has maintained that it does not intend to restart any search-and-rescue mission on the lines of operation Mare Nostrum. On the other hand both the EU and Italy seem committed to the policy of strengthening the Libyan coast guards and other governmental and nongovernmental players in order to prevent migrants from leaving the Libyan shores. The EU has significantly strengthened the <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/aug/28/emmanuel-macron-hosts-summit-to-tackle-migration-crisis">Libyan border patrol</a> by donating tens of millions of dollars to various militias within Libya in order to strengthen their border patrols and coast guards. This financial assistance contributes to the supply of money, equipment, and training for Libya’s border patrol and coast guard, which then intercepts Libyan refugees on their way to Europe and return them to Libyan shores—or before refugees can even leave the shore. In addition, many Libyan outlaws set up camps to detain these prospective asylum seekers.</p>
<p>The policy of exporting the responsibility to ill-equipped Libyan agencies and militias though has worked well for the EU in reducing the flow of migrants across the Mediterranean, it has raised a number of moral and ethical issues about the rights and lives of tens of thousands of refugees and migrants. At the same time, this policy has been responsible for one of the gravest human tragedies in recent times. The Libyan coast guards and other EU funded militias have been accused of horrific abuse of refugees, including torture and rape of refugee women. Further, a report from Refugees International found that hundreds of refugees who have spent months in Libya are facing abuses that include—in addition to torture and rape—arbitrary detention, forced labor, kidnapping and slavery.</p>
<p>The joint European Union, African Union and UN task force that was created to prevent such abuses in November 2017 is solely focused on evacuating refugees from Libya and resettling them in their home countries of Niger, Chad, Cameroon and Burkina Faso. This only exposes them to the same risks that triggered their migration in the first place. As a result, the migrants are once again subject to the conditions of which they sought to flee.</p>
<p><strong>Legal and Ethical Implications</strong></p>
<p>The current EU policy of deterring migrants from arriving on its borders stems from some legitimate concerns ranging from a spiraling economic burden due to mass ingress of refugees to national-security implications. The unabated refugee arrival, EU maintains, is a double-edged sword. On one hand, allowing more immigrants creates an enormous pressure on the already frail economic situation and at the same time it acts as huge pull factor for other refugees to come in. Such a vicious cycle would ultimately have an adverse impact on the national-welfare schemes for EU’s own citizens.</p>
<p>However, in negotiating the ethical responsibility and political considerations, the EU migrant policy has indirectly created conditions leading to grave human-rights abuses of the asylum seekers. The policy demonstrates a strong prioritization of its own political and economic stability at the expense of well-being of Libyan refugees, an argument bound to strike a chord with EU’s domestic constituency. It also allows the EU to diffuse its commitment and moral duty to provide refuge to the displaced migrants and escape direct responsibility for the negative outcomes of such policies, which include denial of basic human rights.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.unhcr.org/en-us/1951-refugee-convention.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Article 1</a> of the 1951 UN Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (as modified by the 1967 Protocol), establishes that refugee status rests upon the conditions of being present outside the home country, a well-founded fear of persecution, and an incapacity to enjoy the protection of one’s own state. The current policy thus adversely impacts the asylum seeker’s ability to actualize their basic human rights and rights as refugees.</p>
<p>The forced detention of of tens of thousands of migrants in the EU funded Libyan run migrant camps is a clear violation of the freedom of mobility and right to leave of migrants fleeing persecution as enshrined in <a href="http://www.un.org/en/universal-declaration-human-rights/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Article 13.2</a> of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states that “everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and return to his country.” Additionally, the EU’s role in perpetuating and supporting Libyan coast guard contributes to the violation of the right of refugees to not have forced return to a place in which they are endangered, a right enshrined in the 1951<a href="http://www.unhcr.org/en-us/1951-refugee-convention.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> United Nations Convention</a> relating to the Status of Refugees and reiterated in the<a href="http://www.unhcr.org/excom/scip/3ae68ccd10/note-non-refoulement-submitted-high-commissioner.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener">non-refoulement</a> principle of international law.</p>
<p>The EU’s objective of preventing asylum seekers from crossing the Mediterranean in overcrowded and fragile vessels remains a legitimate and important political and ethical objective. Yet, the current deterrence policy simply replaces one danger with alternative dangers, foreseeable and unforeseeable; by stopping asylum seekers from crossing the Mediterranean, these asylum seekers are forced to return to and remain in oppressive, abusive, and inhumane conditions on the shores of Libya</p>
<p><strong>Prioritizing Migrant Welfare</strong></p>
<p>The EU needs to rectify its migrant policy and engage with this issue in an ethical and politically responsible way would demonstrate its commitment towards easing the refugee crisis. The EU must seek that its relief efforts do not contribute to the subjugation of the asylum seekers and deny them their basic human and legal rights. The renewal of its search-and-rescue operations, with a shared responsibility among member states, would save thousands of innocent lives from mid-sea disasters.</p>
<p>The EU, AU and the UN should jointly oversee the administration of refugee centers; that effort would allow the refugee camps to become critical in the effort to empower refugees through access to institutional support, safety and suitable living conditions.</p>
<p>Only in properly reforming and addressing its currently policy towards Libyan asylum seekers, internally displaced, and the refugees, can the EU authentically uphold its mandated ethical obligations of solidarity and shared responsibility and also ensure its own political future.</p>
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<p><em>Sajid Farid Shapoo is a Middle East watcher and former Indian Police Service officer with the rank of two-star general. He is a highly decorated counter terrorism expert with over eighteen years of experience in high profile security related assignments. He holds a master’s degree from Columbia University with specialization in Middle East.</p>
<p>Image: A migrant baby on the Migrant Offshore Aid Station (MOAS) ship MV Phoenix waits to be transferred to the Norwegian ship Siem Pilot off the coast of Libya August 6, 2015. An estimated 700 migrants on an overloaded wooden boat were rescued 10.5 miles (16 kilometres) off the coast of Libya by the international non-governmental organisations Medecins san Frontiere (MSF) and MOAS without loss of life on Thursday afternoon, according to MSF and MOAS, a day after more than 200 migrants are feared to have drowned in the latest Mediterranean boat tragedy after rescuers saved over 370 people from a capsized boat thought to be carrying 600. REUTERS/Darrin Zammit Lupi<br />
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<p>Source: <a href="http://nationalinterest.org/feature/libyan-refugee-crisis%E2%80%94eu-must-take-responsibility-alter-its-25429?page=show" target="_blank" rel="noopener">http://nationalinterest.org/feature/libyan-refugee-crisis%E2%80%94eu-must-take-responsibility-alter-its-25429?page=show</a></p>
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