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Tag: Migrants

  • “They fired on us like rain”: Saudi border guards killed hundreds of Ethiopian migrants, Human Rights Watch says

    “They fired on us like rain”: Saudi border guards killed hundreds of Ethiopian migrants, Human Rights Watch says

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    Saudi border guards fired “like rain” on Ethiopian migrants trying to cross into the Gulf kingdom from Yemen, killing hundreds since last year, Human Rights Watch said in a report Monday.

    The allegations, described as “unfounded” by a Saudi government source, point to a significant escalation of abuses along the perilous route from the Horn of Africa to Saudi Arabia, where hundreds of thousands of Ethiopians live and work.

    One 20-year-old woman from Ethiopia’s Oromia region, interviewed by HRW, said Saudi border guards opened fire on a group of migrants they had just released from custody.

    “They fired on us like rain. When I remember, I cry,” she said.

    “I saw a guy calling for help, he lost both his legs. He was screaming; he was saying, ‘Are you leaving me here? Please don’t leave me’. We couldn’t help him because we were running for our lives.”

    ethiopia-migrants-saudi-arabia.jpg
    Ethiopian migrants are seen inside a building while undergoing quarantine as they across Yemen’s land to reach Saudi Arabia on April 05, 2020 in Dhamar governorate, Yemen. (Getty Images)

    HRW researcher Nadia Hardman said “Saudi officials are killing hundreds of migrants and asylum seekers in this remote border area out of view of the rest of the world,” according to a statement.

    “Spending billions buying up professional golf, football clubs, and major entertainment events to improve the Saudi image should not deflect attention from these horrendous crimes,” she said.

    The United States on Monday voiced alarm over the report and urged a full investigation.

    “We have raised our concerns about these allegations with the Saudi government,” a State Department spokesperson said.”We urge the Saudi authorities to undertake a thorough and transparent investigation and also to meet their obligations under international law.”  

    A Saudi government source told AFP that the allegations were unreliable.

    “The allegations included in the Human Rights Watch report about Saudi border guards shooting Ethiopians while they were crossing the Saudi-Yemeni border are unfounded and not based on reliable sources,” said the source, who requested anonymity.

    The New York-based group has documented abuses against Ethiopian migrants in Saudi Arabia and Yemen for nearly a decade, but the latest killings appear to be “widespread and systematic” and may amount to crimes against humanity, it said.

    Last year, United Nations experts reported “concerning allegations” that “cross-border artillery shelling and small-arms fire by Saudi Arabia security forces killed approximately 430 migrants” in southern Saudi Arabia and northern Yemen during the first four months of 2022.

    In March that year, repatriation of Ethiopians from Saudi Arabia began under an agreement between the two countries. Ethiopia’s foreign ministry said about 100,000 of its citizens were expected to be sent home over several months.

    The HRW report said there was no response to letters it sent to Saudi officials.

    But the Houthi rebels who control northern Yemen alleged “deliberate killings of immigrants and Yemenis” by border guards, in response to a letter from HRW.

    According to the rights group, migrants said Houthi forces worked with people smugglers and would “extort” them or keep them in detention centres where they were “abused” until they could pay an “exit fee”.

    The Houthis denied working with people smugglers, describing them as “criminals”.

    In 2015, Saudi officials mobilised a military coalition in an effort to stop the advance of the Iran-backed Houthis, who had seized the Yemeni capital Sanaa from the internationally recognised government the previous year.

    Yemen’s war has created what the UN describes as one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, with millions dependent on aid.

    Many of the abuses described by HRW would have occurred during a truce that took effect in April 2022 and has largely held despite officially expiring last October.

    The HRW report draws from interviews with 38 Ethiopian migrants who tried to cross into Saudi Arabia from Yemen, as well as from satellite imagery, videos and photos posted to social media “or gathered from other sources”.

    Interviewees described 28 “explosive weapons incidents” including attacks by mortar projectiles, the report said.

    Some survivors described attacks at close range, with Saudi border guards asking Ethiopians “in which limb of their body they would prefer to be shot”, the report said.

    “All interviewees described scenes of horror: women, men, and children strewn across the mountainous landscape severely injured, dismembered, or already dead,” it said.

    Other accounts described forced rape and beatings with rocks and iron bars.

    HRW called on Riyadh to end any policy of using lethal force on migrants and asylum seekers, and urged the UN to investigate the alleged killings.

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  • Polish prime minister to ask voters if they accept

    Polish prime minister to ask voters if they accept

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    Poland’s prime minister plans to hold a referendum asking voters if they are willing to accept “thousands of illegal immigrants from the Middle East and Africa,” as his party attempts to hold onto power at the next election.

    Mateusz Morawiecki announced the referendum would be held on the same day as the country’s parliamentary elections in October of this year.

    The referendum question was revealed in a video published on Morawiecki’s social media pages. It includes scenes of burning cars and other street violence in Western Europe. It also features footage of a Black man licking a knife in apparent anticipation of committing a crime. Party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski then says: “Do you want this to happen in Poland as well? Do you want to cease being masters of your own country?”

    Poland EU
    Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki on June 2, 2022. 

    Michal Dyjuk/AP


    The timing of the proposed referendum suggests the current prime minister’s party will be using migration as a topic of campaigning ahead of the polling scheduled for Oct. 15.

    The ruling Law and Justice Party has long defended the restriction on immigration from Muslim and African countries. However, Poland currently hosts more than a million Ukrainian refugees, who are primarily White and Christian, but some officials have previously made clear that they consider Muslims and others from different cultures to be a threat to the nation’s cultural identity and security.

    EU interior ministers in June endorsed a plan to share out responsibility for migrants entering Europe without authorization, the root of one of the bloc’s longest-running political crises.

    Europe’s asylum system collapsed eight years ago after well over a million people entered the bloc — most of them fleeing conflict in Syria — and overwhelmed reception capacities in Greece and Italy, in the process sparking one of the EU’s biggest political crises.

    The 27 EU nations have bickered ever since over which countries should take responsibility for people arriving without authorization, and whether other members should be obliged to help them cope.

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  • Families of migrants killed in detention center fire to receive $8 million each, government says

    Families of migrants killed in detention center fire to receive $8 million each, government says

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    Dozens killed in fire at Mexico migrant center


    Mexico president says migrants started deadly fire at detention center

    05:17

    The families of 40 people who died in a fire at a detention center for undocumented migrants in a Mexican border town in March will receive more than $8 million each, the government said Sunday.

    According to Mexican authorities, the fire in Ciudad Juarez, on the border across from El Paso, Texas, started when a migrant set fire to the mattress in his cell, where he was being held with 67 other men, to protest his possible deportation.

    Security camera footage showed that neither immigration officials nor security personnel attempted to evacuate the migrants once the fire broke out.

    The National Institute of Migration (INM) said Sunday it had asked the finance ministry to provide a “special budget item for the reparation of the damage.”

    Vigil outside the office of the National Institute of Migration (INM) in Ciudad Juarez
    Migrants hold a candlelight vigil outside the office of the National Institute of Migration on March 28, 2023 in memory of the victims of a fire that broke out late on Monday at a migrant detention center in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

    JOSE LUIS GONZALEZ / REUTERS


    The amount approved was 140 million pesos for each of the families, equivalent to about $8.2 million, the INM said.

    A total of 39 migrants died at the scene, most of them from asphyxiation, and one more in a hospital. In addition, 27 suffered injuries.

    The dead included 19 Guatemalans, seven Salvadorans, seven Venezuelans, six Hondurans and one Colombian, with the INM saying all the bodies had now been repatriated.

    Ciudad Juarez is one of the border towns where numerous migrants seeking to cross into the United States end up stranded.

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  • Barrels Of Drinking Water For Migrants Walking Through Texas Have Disappeared

    Barrels Of Drinking Water For Migrants Walking Through Texas Have Disappeared

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    HEBBRONVILLE, Texas (AP) — As one of the worst heat waves on record set in across much of the southern United States this summer, authorities and activists in South Texas found themselves embroiled in a mystery in this arid region near the border with Mexico.

    Barrels of life-saving water that a human rights group had strategically placed for wayward migrants traveling on foot had vanished.

    Usually, they are hard to miss. Labeled with the word “AGUA” painted in white, capital letters and standing about waist-high, the 55-gallon (208-liter), blue drums stand out against the scrub and grass, turned from green to a sundried brown.

    The stakes of solving this mystery are high.

    Summer temperatures can climb to 110 degrees Fahrenheit (43.3 degrees Celsius) in Texas’ sparsely populated Jim Hogg County, with its vast, inhospitable ranchlands. Migrants — and sometimes human smugglers — take a route through this county to try to circumvent a Border Patrol checkpoint on a busier highway about 30 miles (48 kilometers) to the east. More than 60 miles (96 kilometers) from the U.S.-Mexico border, it can take several days to walk there for migrants who may have already spent weeks crossing mountains and desert and avoiding cartel violence.

    “We don’t have the luxury of losing time in what we do,” said Ruben Garza’s, an investigator with the Jim Hogg Sheriff’s Office. Tears streamed down his face as he recalled helping locate a missing migrant man who became overheated in the brush, called for help but died just moments after his rescue.

    Exact counts of those who die are difficult to determine because deaths often go unreported. The U.N. International Organization for Migration estimates almost 3,000 migrants have died crossing from Mexico to the U.S. by drowning in Rio Grande, or because of lack of shelter, food or water.

    Humanitarian groups started placing water for migrants in spots on the U.S. side of the border with Mexico in the 1990s after authorities began finding bodies of those who succumbed to the harsh conditions.

    John Meza volunteers with the South Texas Human Rights Center in Jim Hogg County, where the population of about 5,000 people is spread over 1,100 square miles (2,850 square kilometers) — larger than the state of Rhode Island. He restocks the stations with gallon jugs of water, trims away overgrown grass, and ensures the GPS coordinates are still visible on the underside of the barrel lids.

    On one of his rounds in July, Meza said, 12 of the 21 stations he maintains were no longer there.

    The Associated Press compared images captured by Google Maps over the last two years and confirmed that some barrels that were once there were gone.

    Wildfires are common in this part of Texas, where dry grass quickly becomes fuel. Road construction crews frequently push or move aside obstructions for their work. But as Garza, the sheriff’s investigator, walked along a path designated by GPS coordinates for the barrels, there were no signs of melted, blue plastic. And nothing indicated the heavy barrels had been moved. Though volunteers fill them only partway, they can weigh up to about 85 pounds (38 kilograms).

    The investigator drove up and down the main highway where many of the water stations were installed near private property fence lines making note of the circumstances of each missing barrel.

    Empty water bottles sat on the ground near the round impression left behind by the heavy barrel in one site. At another, the grass was trimmed, and fresh earth was laid bare to create buffers against fire.

    Garza suspected state road crews moved three barrels that had been along an unpaved road, but the Texas Department of Transportation denied it. The investigator also noted a “tremendous amount” of wildfires could be to blame. He’s also speaking with area ranchers in hopes of showing the disappearances may be a simple misunderstanding, not a crime.

    “They probably have a logical explanation,” he said, with no apparent lead.

    Migrant rights activist Eduardo Canales walks behind one of his blue water drops Saturday, May 15, 2021, in Falfurrias, Texas. Every week, Canales fills up blue water drums that are spread throughout a vast valley of Texas ranchlands and brush. They are there for migrants who venture into the rough terrain to avoid being caught and sent back to Mexico. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

    But in other states along the southern border, missing water stations have been ascribed to spiteful intentions.

    The group No More Deaths in 2018 released video of Border Patrol agents kicking over and pouring water out of gallon jugs left for people in the desert.

    No More Deaths said that from 2012 to 2015, it found more than 3,586 gallon jugs of water that had been destroyed in an 800-square-mile (2,072-square-kilometer) desert area in southern Arizona.

    Laura Hunter and her husband, John, started putting out water along popular smuggling routes in Southern California in the 1990s. They note their effort is not affiliated with political or religious groups, but that their work is often attacked.

    “Every single year, we have vandalism, of course, you know, people that don’t agree with what we do,” Laura Hunter said.

    The Hunters met with Eddie Canales, the executive director of the South Texas Human Rights Center, about 15 years ago and provided the design for the low-cost water stations. In light of the news, they offered some advice.

    “I would replace them all with some used barrels, just replace them all,” John Hunter said. “And then I would put a couple of cameras on those and get the guy’s license plates and his face.”

    Canales said he plans to work with volunteers to replace the missing stations in the coming days.

    The number of migrants crossing through South Texas and subsequent deaths decreased this year after President Joe Biden’s administration instituted new border polices. A medical examiner’s office who covers eleven counties including Jim Hogg has received the bodies of 85 migrants who died this year. It represents less than half the number sent to that office in 2022. Most of the migrants who died this year suffered fatal heat strokes.

    But that could change, especially if legal challenges to the Biden administration’s policies are successful.

    For now, the mystery about the barrels’ disappearance remains unsolved. But Meza, the volunteer who restocks the barrels in Jim Hogg County, plans to continue his work

    “If that was intentional, that’s a pretty malicious thing. You know what I mean?” Meza asked. “You’re saying, ‘Let these people die because I don’t want to give them access to water.’”

    Associated Press writer Anita Snow in Phoenix contributed to this report.

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  • 6 migrants dead, 50 rescued from capsized boat in the English Channel

    6 migrants dead, 50 rescued from capsized boat in the English Channel

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    An overloaded boat carrying migrants capsized before dawn Saturday in the English Channel, killing at least six people and leaving more than 50 others to be rescued, according to French authorities.

    About 65 people were estimated to have boarded the boat and two people may still be lost at sea, the Maritime Prefecture of the Channel and the North Sea said.

    When rescuers plucked people from the waters, six were initially in critical condition. One of those, who was flown by helicopter to a Calais hospital, was pronounced dead and the other five later perished and were ferried to shore.

    “This morning, a migrant boat capsized off Calais,” French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne said on social media. “My thoughts are with the victims.”

    The deaths come as Britain’s ruling Conservative party has sought to stop crossings of small, often unseaworthy, boats with a variety of policies that have come under fire for failing to stem the flow of migrants.

    French authorities noted a marked increase in attempted crossings from the coast since Thursday during the onset of milder weather. British authorities said 755 people crossed the channel in small boats Thursday, the highest daily number this year.

    Small boat arrivals are down 15% from the number at this point last year. As of Thursday, 15,826 had been detected in the year to date, compared to 18,600 at this time last year.

    Last year, five migrants died and four were reported missing while attempting to cross from the northern coast of France. In November 2021, a boat carrying migrants sank, resulting in the deaths of 27 individuals.

    U.K. Home Secretary Suella Braverman, who said on the platform X, formerly known as Twitter, that there had been a “tragic loss of life,” met Saturday with Border Force officials.

    “This incident is sadly another reminder of the extreme dangers of crossing the Channel in small boats and how vital it is that we break the people smugglers’ business model and stop the boats,” a spokesperson for Braverman said in a statement.

    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has made “stop the boats” a rallying cry and a focus of his political platform but his efforts have faced setbacks.

    The centerpiece of policies designed to deter people from risking their lives at sea is legislation that would deport refugees who arrive illegally back to their home country or a safe third country. But plans to fly people to Rwanda have been shot down by an appeals court and are now being appealed by the Supreme Court.

    As Conservatives kicked off what they were calling “small boats week,” they hailed the first arrivals Monday of asylum seekers to be housed in what essentially was a floating dormitory moored off England’s south coast.

    The barge Bibby Stockholm, which had been used to house oil rig workers, was leased to save the 6 million pounds ($7.6 million) spent on hotels each day for some 51,000 asylum seekers.

    It was outfitted to house 500 men, but on Friday, the initial 39 on board had to be evacuated when the deadly bacteria that causes legionnaires’ disease was found in the water. The Home Office said no one onboard had become ill.

    Charity groups for refugees and members of the opposition Labour Party have strongly criticized Sunak’s policies, but even his fellow Tories have heaped criticism for the barge fiasco.

    Member of Parliament David Davis said that even if the barge worked properly it would only house a day’s worth of new arrivals and pointed to the need for processing asylum claims more quickly.

    “The primary thing that’s been revealed has been the startling incompetence of the Home Office itself,” Davis told BBC Radio 4. “It’s really, really hard to understand how, at all layers, this could not be caught early.”

    Steve Smith, chief executive of refugee charity Care4Calais, called the deaths an appalling tragedy that could have been prevented if the U.K. allowed people to apply for asylum in France and travel safely to Britain.

    “This terrible loss of life demonstrates yet again the need for a system of safe passage to the UK for refugees,” Smith said. “It would put the people smugglers out of business overnight.”

    A report from a patrol boat about a migrant vessel in distress near Sangatte in France triggered a search and rescue operation Saturday that involved British and French vessels. Three French ships, a helicopter and a plane canvassed the area and two British ships participated in the search.

    Three dozen people were taken to the port of Calais on a French boat and at least 22 were taken to Dover by U.K. rescuers.

    The incident is under investigation by the Boulogne prosecutor’s office.

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  • 3-year-old migrant girl dies while on bus to Chicago

    3-year-old migrant girl dies while on bus to Chicago

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    3-year-old migrant girl dies while on bus to Chicago – CBS News


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    A 3-year-old girl died while traveling aboard a bus from Texas to Chicago with a group of asylum seekers, officials said. An investigation into the death is underway.

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  • 3-year-old migrant girl dies aboard bus headed from Texas to Chicago

    3-year-old migrant girl dies aboard bus headed from Texas to Chicago

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    Migrant girl, age 3, dies while on bus to Chicago


    3-year-old migrant girl dies while on bus to Chicago

    00:26

    A 3-year-old migrant girl riding a bus carrying asylum seekers from Texas to Chicago died Thursday in Southern Illinois, authorities said.

    The girl died at a hospital in Marion County, an official for the Illinois Department of Public Health confirmed to CBS News. She was believed to be traveling with her mother and father. She was not identified. 

    The girl was on a bus which had originated from the Texas border town of Brownsville, both the Illinois health official and the Texas Division of Emergency Management confirmed. 

    No details were provided regarding a possible cause of death.

    Texas officials said in a statement that when the girl “presented with health concerns,” the bus “pulled over and security personnel on board called 911 for emergency attention.” The girl was treated by paramedics before being taken by ambulance to a hospital.

    The Illinois Department of Public Health said in a statement that it is “working with local health officials, state police, and federal authorities to the fullest extent possible to get answers in this tragic situation.”

    Texas officials confirmed the bus was headed to Chicago as part of its “border bus mission.” Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is one of several Republican governors in southern states who have authorized the bussing of thousands of migrants to Democratic-run cities since early 2022 as part of an ongoing political battle over immigration policies. Critics have accused GOP leaders of using migrants as political pawns. 

    Abbott has sent several migrant buses to Los Angeles in recent months, while Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration also sent several charted planes to the California capitol of Sacramento.  

    “State-sanctioned kidnapping is not a public policy choice, it is immoral and disgusting,” California Attorney General Rob Bonta said of the practice in June. 

    Adriana Diaz contributed to this report. 

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  • The Political Wrangling Behind the Tragic Images of Migrants Stranded in Manhattan

    The Political Wrangling Behind the Tragic Images of Migrants Stranded in Manhattan

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    As tens of thousands of migrants overwhelm New York City’s shelter system, Mayor Eric Adams has tried every tactic to enlist help in dealing with the crisis. He has been pleading with New York governor Kathy Hochul for assistance, with only modest success. He has praised Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer and House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries, who are both Democrats from Brooklyn, for pushing to appropriate nearly $105 million in aid. He’s blasted President Joe Biden for failing to better manage the flow of people crossing the US southern border—an outburst that backfired politically, with Adams dropped from a list of Biden reelection surrogates. Yet the city’s freshest and perhaps most powerful tool is the product of an unhappy accident: More than a hundred migrants waiting to enter an asylum intake center in midtown Manhattan last week were seen sleeping on the sidewalk. The tragic spectacle generated a wealth of media coverage and gave Adams an opening to dial up pressure for federal help. “For someone to say they think it was strategic, to me, feels insulting,” says Anne Williams-Isom, the city’s deputy mayor for health and human services. “We’ve been killing ourselves 24/7 to try to make sure no one sleeps on the streets. This was a perfect storm.”

    There has been plenty to question in the Adams administration’s response to the yearlong surge of migrants. The city has erected, then rapidly folded—and now plans to install again—a large tent shelter on an island along the East River. It backed away from placing people in a Brooklyn public school gym after neighborhood protests. City Hall handed a no-bid $432 million contract for migrant case management to a company that had previously provided COVID testing. Adams has at times sounded jarringly hostile—once claiming that the city was being “destroyed” by the migrant crisis—especially given New York’s history as a haven for the tired and poor.

    Yet the mayor’s team has also opened 198 sites, as of this week, that give new arrivals a temporary place to stay, in keeping with a “right to shelter” mandate that’s unique for a major city (and a law that the city has been trying to weaken in court). And the city reportedly found beds for the roughly 100 migrants that were sleeping on the Manhattan sidewalk outside an intake center last week. Since the spring of 2022, nearly 100,000 migrants have arrived in New York, Adams has said. That’s a lot of people, even in a city of more than eight million, and it has pushed the nightly shelter population north of 100,000, Williams-Isom told me. The estimated cost of housing and caring for all those newcomers is even more staggering: $12 billion over three fiscal years, according to Adams. At some point, the migrant crisis was bound to become a numbers problem, even if the mayor had handled its management flawlessly.

    Last month, after a meeting between Adams and Alejandro Mayorkas, the secretary of homeland security, a DHS “assessment team” was sent to the city to evaluate the migrant crisis. Otherwise, New York’s requests have largely gone unanswered, a City Hall official says. The more progressive Democratic members of New York’s congressional delegation, who have often been at odds with Adams, have largely been silent or supportive during the mayor’s recent push for more White House help, though Congressman Jerry Nadler last week offered a mild defense of the administration. “They’re doing what they can,” Nadler told New York’s Fox 5. “Of course, the real solution is comprehensive immigration reform, which we’ve been trying to do for decades, but the Republicans in the Senate keep blocking it.”

    The top priority, Williams-Isom says, is for the Biden administration to devise a “decompression” strategy for the southern border that would steer larger numbers of migrants to locations other than New York. She would also like to see Washington expedite work authorization for migrants, something the city has been seeking for months. But the list also includes items that seem eminently doable, including access to federal real estate within the city’s boundaries, such as Floyd Bennett Field, a decommissioned airport in Brooklyn.

    The White House has routinely—and correctly—pointed the finger at congressional Republicans who refuse to make a deal on comprehensive immigration reform. But the president’s reelection campaign next year may also be a factor. Last December, a Biden insider told me that immigration loomed as a major vulnerability, and the issue has only grown messier since then. An Adams associate wonders if Biden’s team is trying to avoid greater political ownership of New York’s migrant troubles, so as not to invite louder Republican campaign attacks.

    “We are committed to working to identify ways to improve efficiencies and maximize the resources the federal government can provide,” a White House spokesperson told me Thursday. Per the White House, the president’s senior adviser Tom Perez went to New York on Thursday to work with state and city officials on the migrant situation. “Since the administration’s border enforcement and management plan went into full effect, unlawful border crossings are lower than before Title 42 lifted. However, only Congress can reform our broken immigration system and provide additional resources to communities across the country.”

    Republicans’ barrages, many of them racist, are very likely to be launched against Biden anyway, especially if front-runner Donald Trump is the Republican nominee. And if the president plays it safe on immigration, he could miss an opportunity to win over crucial voters. “Immigration cuts both ways as an election issue,” says Cornell Belcher, a Democratic pollster who worked on both of Barack Obama’s victorious White House runs. “Republicans are a lot better at using it as a wedge and a motivating issue, because their rallying thematic is Gotham City, and it’s all fear and rage: ‘We are under attack and these people pouring across the borders are an invasion.’ But there’s also a group of voters who are incredibly important to us who care about immigration, some of them middle-of-the-road voters who don’t understand why there isn’t a pathway to citizenship.”

    The realist political calculation is for Biden to do the minimum on immigration, and hope that in a second term he’s working with solid Democratic majorities in both houses of Congress. But the humane thing—the presidential thing—to do now is to give New York all the bureaucratic changes and financial resources that Biden can muster. And on Thursday afternoon, all the suffering and political pressure showed some possible signs of having an impact: The president, as part of a $40 billion appropriations request to Congress, included $600 million for “shelter and services program grants.” Here’s hoping the money is approved, and that some of it makes its way to New York. Or a whole lot more people may end up spending their nights on city sidewalks.

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  • New York City Mayor Eric Adams talks influx of asylum seekers

    New York City Mayor Eric Adams talks influx of asylum seekers

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    New York City Mayor Eric Adams talks influx of asylum seekers – CBS News


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    The five boroughs of New York City are currently hosting approximately 57,000 asylum seekers and the number continues to rise. Mayor Eric Adams sits down with “CBS Mornings” for a closer look at the humanitarian crisis growing there and what he hopes the Biden Administration will do to fix it.

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  • Mexico finds 491 migrants in vacant lot en route to U.S. — and 277 of them are children

    Mexico finds 491 migrants in vacant lot en route to U.S. — and 277 of them are children

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    Judge blocks administration’s asylum policy


    Judge blocks Biden administration policy aimed at reducing illegal border crossings

    01:22

    Mexico’s immigration agency said late Friday it found 491 migrants being held at a compound by the side of a highway east of Mexico City.

    All but six of the migrants were from Guatemala. The others are Hondurans.

    There were 277 children and adolescents among the migrants, most of whom were traveling with relatives. But there were also 52 unaccompanied minors.

    The migrants were being held in a walled compound near the city of Puebla, along a route frequently used by migrant smugglers. The migrants were taken to offices of the Mexico’s National Institute of Migration. 

    “They were transferred to headquarters of the National Institute of Migration to provide them with water, food and medical attention,” the organization said in a statement.

    Smugglers in Mexico frequently hide migrants at such compounds until they can be taken aboard buses or trucks to the U.S. border. 

    The Biden administration instituted stricter asylum rules in an effort to contain the surge of illegal migration to the United States. In June CBS News reported that the number of migrants plummeted that month but the DHS still expects to see a “lot of migration in coming weeks and months.”

    A busload of 49 migrants arrived in Los Angeles on Friday afternoon, the seventh such busload since June 14, CBS Los Angeles reported.

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  • Asylum seekers forced to sleep on New York City sidewalks

    Asylum seekers forced to sleep on New York City sidewalks

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    Asylum seekers forced to sleep on New York City sidewalks – CBS News


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    The migrant crisis in New York City is worsening as many asylum seekers waiting to be processed are forced to sleep on sidewalks outside of Manhattan hotels. The mayors of several major U.S. cities, including New York City Mayor Eric Adams, have asked the Biden administration for federal assistance. Meg Oliver reports.

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  • Migrant crisis in New York City worsens as asylum seekers are forced to sleep on sidewalks

    Migrant crisis in New York City worsens as asylum seekers are forced to sleep on sidewalks

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    The migrant crisis in New York City is reaching a breaking point, with some asylum seekers now being forced to sleep on the streets. 

    In midtown Manhattan, asylum seekers are sleeping on the sidewalks outside the Roosevelt Hotel, which is now a migrant processing center for city shelters. 

    Adrian Daniel Jose is among the dozens of people waiting to get services. Leaving his wife and three kids in Venezuela, the 36-year-old said the journey to the U.S. was dangerous.

    He said he was robbed in Mexico, forcing him to cross the border with just the clothes on his back and a pair of taped-together glasses.

    New York City Mayor Eric Adams on Monday said of the crisis, “From this moment on, it’s downhill. There is no more room.”

    Since last spring, more than 95,000 migrants have arrived in New York City, according to the mayor’s office. 

    NYC Considers Tent Camps in Central, Prospect Parks to Shelter Migrants
    Migrants wait outside the Roosevelt Hotel hoping for a place to stay on August 2, 2023, in New York City. City officials are considering housing the influx of migrants in tents in Central Park in Manhattan and in Prospect Park in Brooklyn as the numbers arriving daily overwhelm available facilities.

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    To reduce the chaos, Adams and the mayors of Chicago and Denver are asking the Biden administration to expedite work permits for migrants coming to their cities.

    Thousands have been bused from Texas to cities across the country as part of Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott’s controversial Operation Lone Star. 

    According to the Houston Chronicle, Texas troopers have begun detaining fathers traveling with their families, while children and their mothers are turned over to Border Patrol. The move is reminiscent of the Trump administration policy that separated some families for years. 

    Back in New York City, Russia’s Natalia and Maksim Subbotina are seeking political asylum. They arrived in Mexico after months of waiting, crossed into the U.S. and arrived from Texas on Tuesday.

    “It’s so hard. In my country, I was a famous professor. I have a home, but, uh, this is first day and I haven’t,” Natalia Subbotina said. 

    She told CBS News she hasn’t slept since she arrived because “I can’t sleep in this situation. I can’t sleep. It’s not safe for me. For him.” 

    To cut down on illegal border crossings, the Biden administration barred asylum claims from those who don’t first seek refuge in other countries. But a district judge halted that order last month, and officials must end that policy next week unless a higher court intervenes.

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  • Texas Trooper Emailed Boss To Warn Of ‘Inhumane’ Razor Wire ‘Traps’ At Border: Report

    Texas Trooper Emailed Boss To Warn Of ‘Inhumane’ Razor Wire ‘Traps’ At Border: Report

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    An officer working at Texas’ southern border with Mexico emailed his superior expressing deep concerns that efforts to prevent migrants from crossing into the U.S. had “stepped over a line into the inhumane” earlier this month, according to a shocking account published by the San Antonio Express-News.

    The unnamed trooper, who works for Texas’ Department of Public Safety, described troubling orders to prevent asylum seekers from crossing the Rio Grande in Eagle Pass, Texas, in recent months. State officials have drawn sharp criticism after deploying miles of floating barricades covered in razor wire on the river, an initiative the officer likened to “traps” meant to snare migrants.

    The email details multiple troubling incidents in which migrants were caught or injured by the razor wire.

    In one instance, a 19-year-old woman “in obvious pain” was found stuck in the wire before she was cut free. Medical officials determined she was pregnant and having a miscarriage. At another point, troopers treated a man with a “significant laceration” on his leg that he sustained while trying to free his child from a “trap in the water” covered in razor wire.

    The email also details a moment on June 25 when a shift officer ordered troopers to push a large group of people — including small children and babies that were nursing — back into the Rio Grande “to go to Mexico.” Troopers on site resisted the order after they expressed concern the exhausted migrants could drown, and they were later ordered to tell the group to go back to Mexico before leaving the site.

    The trooper also alluded to an order to prevent officers from providing water to migrants, although Texas officials have denied any such mandate exists.

    “Due to the extreme heat, the order to not give people water needs to be immediately reversed as well,” the trooper wrote, suggesting a series of policy changes to protect migrants’ safety. The officer later added: “I believe we have stepped over a line into the inhumane.”

    HuffPost has reached out to Texas’ DPS for comment on the report.

    Migrants trying to enter the U.S. from Mexico approach the site where workers are assembling large buoys to be used as a barrier along the banks of the Rio Grande in Eagle Pass, Texas, on July 11.

    Eric Gay/Associated Press

    Travis Considine, a spokesperson for the Department of Public Safety, told the Express-News that the agency was aware of the email and that its director, Steven McCraw, called for an audit last Saturday into lowering risk for migrants. McCraw also sent another email to troopers saying the wire, a key feature of Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s (R) border measures, was meant to deter smuggling, “not to injure migrants.”

    “The smugglers care not if the migrants are injured, but we do, and we must take all necessary measures to mitigate the risk to them including injuries from trying to cross over the concertina wire, drownings and dehydration,” the message said.

    Abbott has taken dramatic steps to prevent migrants from crossing the state’s border with Mexico, lambasting President Joe Biden for failing to do enough to stop a surge of crossings. The governor also has dropped off thousands of migrants in cities across the nation, mainly in states led by Democratic officials, in an act that human rights groups have blasted as inhumane.

    The report brought swift condemnation from Democrats. Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-Texas) called the razor wire barriers “death traps” on Twitter, saying he had urged the Biden administration to intervene “for the sake of human rights.”

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  • Migrant workers said to be leaving Florida over new immigration law

    Migrant workers said to be leaving Florida over new immigration law

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    Miami — A controversial Florida law which took effect Saturday no longer recognizes driver’s licenses issued to undocumented immigrants from other states, among other restrictions.

    It is part of a sweeping immigration bill signed by Republican Florida governor and presidential candidate Ron DeSantis back in May that is prompting many to leave the state.

    The run-up to the new law has sparked protests by immigrant workers, from those in the tourism and hospitality industry, to those who work in agricultural fields.

    “We are hearing people are starting to leave,” Yvette Cruz with the Farmworkers Association of Florida told CBS News of reports of migrant workers abandoning fields and construction projects. “We’re just gonna keep seeing that more as the law will take effect.”

    The law also includes harsh penalties for those who try and hire or transport undocumented migrants, which critics say can include family members.

    It also requires hospitals that receive Medicaid funds to ask for a patient’s immigration status.

    DeSantis claims the legislation is needed due to what he considers the Biden’s administration’s failure to secure the border.

    “At the end of the day, you wouldn’t have the illegal immigration problem if you didn’t have a lot of people who were facilitating this in our country,” DeSantis recently said during a campaign rally.

    For farmworkers like Ofelia Aguilar, who is undocumented but has children who are U.S. citizens — including an 8-year-old son — the new law sparks fear of separation.

    “I’m not going to leave my son behind,” Aguilar said. “If I leave, my son is coming with me.”

    Aguilar said she recently fell off a truck while on the job, and was bedridden with a back injury for two weeks. However, she did not seek medical care for fear she’d be asked about her immigration status.

    The Florida Policy Institute estimates that nearly 10% of workers in Florida’s most labor-intensive industries are undocumented, leaving employers and workers uncertain about the future the new law will create.

    The law was one of more than 200 signed by DeSantis which took effect Saturday and impact areas including abortion, education and guns. 

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  • Migrant workers said to be leaving Florida over restrictive new driver’s license law

    Migrant workers said to be leaving Florida over restrictive new driver’s license law

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    Miami — A controversial Florida law which took effect Saturday no longer recognizes driver’s licenses issued to undocumented immigrants from other states, among other restrictions.

    It is part of a sweeping immigration bill signed by Republican Florida governor and presidential candidate Ron DeSantis back in May that is prompting many to leave the state.

    The run-up to the new law has sparked protests by immigrant workers, from those in the tourism and hospitality industry, to those who work in agricultural fields.

    “We are hearing people are starting to leave,” Yvette Cruz with the Farmworkers Association of Florida told CBS News of reports of migrant workers abandoning fields and construction projects. “We’re just gonna keep seeing that more as the law will take effect.”

    The law also includes harsh penalties for those who try and hire or transport undocumented migrants, which critics say can include family members.

    It also requires hospitals that receive Medicaid funds to ask for a patient’s immigration status.

    DeSantis claims the legislation is needed due to what he considers the Biden’s administration’s failure to secure the border.

    “At the end of the day, you wouldn’t have the illegal immigration problem if you didn’t have a lot of people who were facilitating this in our country,” DeSantis recently said during a campaign rally.

    For farmworkers like Ofelia Aguilar, who is undocumented but has children who are U.S. citizens — including an 8-year-old son — the new law sparks fear of separation.

    “I’m not going to leave my son behind,” Aguilar said. “If I leave, my son is coming with me.”

    Aguilar said she recently fell off a truck while on the job, and was bedridden with a back injury for two weeks. However, she did not seek medical care for fear she’d be asked about her immigration status.

    The Florida Policy Institute estimates that nearly 10% of workers in Florida’s most labor-intensive industries are undocumented, leaving employers and workers uncertain about the future the new law will create.

    The law was one of more than 200 signed by DeSantis which took effect Saturday and impact areas including abortion, education and guns. 

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  • U.S. to house migrant children in former North Carolina boarding school later this summer

    U.S. to house migrant children in former North Carolina boarding school later this summer

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    Washington — The Biden administration is planning to start housing up to 800 unaccompanied migrant children processed along the southern border in a repurposed boarding school in North Carolina later this summer, a U.S. official familiar with the plan told CBS News.

    The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Refugee Resettlement, the agency charged with caring for unaccompanied migrant minors, is eyeing to open the facility in Greensboro, North Carolina, in August, according to the official, who was granted anonymity to discuss internal plans.

    The former home of a boarding school known as the American Hebrew Academy will house migrant boys and girls between the ages of 13 and 17 who entered U.S. border custody without their parents or legal guardians.

    With 800 beds, the campus will become the government’s largest active housing facility for unaccompanied minors. It will be opened as an “influx care facility,” a term HHS uses to describe emergency housing sites it sets up during a spike in child migrant arrivals along the southern border.

    Another influx care facility in Texas, a tent camp inside the sprawling Fort Bliss U.S. Army post, currently has the capacity to house up to 500 migrant children. HHS has sought to minimize its use of the Fort Bliss camp, which was dogged with reports of substandard conditions and child depression in 2021. The other influx care facility, a former work camp in Pecos, Texas, has not housed children since earlier this year.

    Advocates for migrant children have long criticized the establishment and use of influx care facilities, particularly because they are not regulated by state child welfare agencies, unlike traditional HHS shelters. Over the years, facilities like the Fort Bliss camp — and a now-shuttered facility in Homestead, Florida — have gained national infamy because of reports of subpar services and distressed children.

    The facility in Greensboro, however, was originally set up to house students, and includes more than two dozen buildings, sport fields and an athletic center in a green campus near a lake. The site will offer migrant children educational instruction, recreation, mental health support and medical services.

    Still, Neha Desai, a lawyer at the National Center for Youth Law, one of the groups representing migrant children in a landmark court case, said the government is relying too heavily on influx care facilities. HHS should instead use shelters licensed by state child welfare authorities, she said.

    “This protracted and inappropriate reliance on unlicensed facilities undermines the commitment to placement in licensed facilities and moreover, undermines the best interests of children,” Desai added.

    Migrant children border
    In a photo taken on March 27, 2021 unaccompanied child migrants who arrived into the U.S. across the Rio Grande river from Mexico, stand at a makeshift processing checkpoint before being detained at a holding facility by Border Patrol agents in the border Texas city of Roma.

    ED JONES/AFP via Getty Images


    HHS houses unaccompanied children who lack a legal immigration status in shelters, foster homes and emergency housing facilities until they turn 18 or can be placed with a U.S.-based sponsor, who is typically a family member, such as a parent, older sibling or grandparent. Most unaccompanied children who pass through the agency’s custody are teenagers who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border without authorization after fleeing poverty and violence in Central America.

    U.S. law prevents border officials from rapidly deporting non-Mexican unaccompanied children, and allows them to apply for an immigration benefit, such as asylum or visas for abused, abandoned or neglected youth, to try to stay in the country legally. HHS facilities generally have more services and better conditions than the jail-like stations and tents overseen by Border Patrol, which is bound by law to transfer unaccompanied minors to HHS within 72 hours of processing them.

    While influx care facilities have been opened during spikes in child migration, arrivals of unaccompanied minors along the U.S.-Mexico border have declined since setting a record high in fiscal year 2022. Border Patrol processed 9,458 unaccompanied minors in May, a 34% drop from the same month last year, according to federal statistics

    As of earlier this week, HHS was housing just over 5,800 migrant children, the lowest level during the Biden administration, and a nearly 75% drop from a peak of 22,000 minors in the spring of 2022, government records show. At that time, the Biden administration struggled to respond to a sharp increase in the number of unaccompanied children entering border custody and was forced to convert work camps, convention centers and military bases into makeshift shelters.

    Overall illegal crossings along the southern border have also declined recently. While the termination of the Title 42 public health restrictions on migration on May 11 were expected to fuel a massive rise in migrant arrivals, unlawful border crossings have instead plunged to roughly 3,000 after peaking at 10,000.

    HHS’ processing of unaccompanied minors has been under scrutiny under the Biden administration due to a marked increase in cases of migrant teens working dangerous and grueling jobs after being released from government custody. Their jobs in factories, meat plants and construction sites violate federal child labor laws, which severely restrict the type of physical work minors can do.

    After The New York Times published an investigation into these cases earlier this year, the administration announced it would improve the vetting of adults who sponsor migrant children out of government custody, and ramp up efforts to prosecute cases of child exploitation in worksites.

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  • Hundreds more missing after migrant boat capsizes off Greek coast

    Hundreds more missing after migrant boat capsizes off Greek coast

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    Hundreds of people remain missing after a migrant ship went down off the south coast of Greece on Wednesday, as criticism mounted over Europe’s years-long failure to prevent such tragedies.

    Rescuers pulled 104 survivors from the water and later recovered 78 bodies, but have not located any more since late Wednesday. The Greek coast guard said the search-and-rescue operation would continue beyond the standard 72 hours.

    In a joint statement Friday, two United Nations agencies — the International Organization for Migration and the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees — said that the boat was believed to be carrying anywhere from 400 to 750 people, and that “hundreds remain missing, and feared dead.”

    The U.N. statement said that the boat had been in distress since Tuesday, but that a search and rescue operation was not initiated until it capsized on Wednesday.

    Rescued immigrants in Greece's Kalamata
    Migrants rescued from a boat that sank off the south coast of Greece carrying hundreds of people on June 14 were placed inside a warehouse in Kalamata.

    Angelos Tzortzinis / Afp / Pool/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images


    Patrol boats and a helicopter spent Friday scouring the area of the Mediterranean Sea where the packed fishing vessel capsized.

    Nine people —all men from Egypt, ranging in age from 20 to 40— were arrested and charged Friday with people smuggling and participating in a criminal enterprise. Twenty-seven of the survivors remain hospitalized, health officials said. The smuggling suspects are due to appear in court Monday.

    Greek coast guard spokesman Nikos Alexiou said that coast guard and private ships repeatedly offered by radio and loudspeaker to help the vessel Wednesday while it was in international waters, heading from Libya to Italy, but they were rejected.

    Alexiou argued that any effort to tow the overcrowded trawler or move hundreds of unwilling people onto nearby ships would have been too dangerous.

    “When you … try forcibly to tie up to it or to attach a mooring rope, you will have a disturbance, and the people will surge — which, unfortunately is what happened in the end,” Alexiou told state-run ERT TV. “You will have caused the accident.”

    Alexiou also said that, after accepting food from a merchant ship, the trawler’s passengers rejected a rope from a second merchant ship “because they thought the whole process was a way for us to take them to Greece.”

    Greek authorities sent the first ship, the tanker Lucky Sailor, to give the migrants food and water.

    The company managing the tanker said Friday that the people on board “were very hesitant to receive any assistance, and at any attempt of approach the boat started to maneuver away.”

    Eastern Mediterranean Maritime Limited said in a statement that the people on the trawler were eventually persuaded to accept supplies.

    The survivors were all boys and men from Egypt, Pakistan, Syria and the Palestinian territories. Alexiou, citing survivor accounts, said passengers in the hold of the fishing boat included women and children but that the number of missing still remained unclear.

    Experts said maritime law obligated Greek authorities to attempt a rescue.

    They definitely “had a duty to start rescue procedures” given the condition of the vessel, said Erik Røsæg of the University of Oslo’s Institute of Private Law. He said a refusal of assistance can be overruled if deemed unreasonable, as it appeared to have been on Wednesday.

    The U.N. agencies said that timely maritime search and rescues are “a legal and humanitarian imperative” and called for “urgent and decisive action to prevent further deaths at sea.”

    Flavio Di Giacomo of the Mediterranean office of the U.N. migration agency tweeted that all migrant boats should be considered dangerous and rescued immediately because “even when they appear to have no problems, in a few minutes they can sink.”

    A group of nongovernmental organizations, including Amnesty International and Doctors Without Borders, said the EU should “stop seeing solutions solely in the dismantling” of smuggling networks, and set up state-led search-and-rescue operations in the Mediterranean.

    “The Greek government had specific responsibilities toward every passenger on the vessel, which was clearly in distress,” Adriana Tidona of Amnesty International said. “This is a tragedy of unimaginable proportions, all the more so because it was entirely preventable.”

    Greece and other southern EU nations that typically are the first destinations for Europe-bound asylum-seekers traveling by sea have toughened border protection measures in recent years, extending walls and intensifying maritime patrols.

    “This is a European problem. I think it’s time for Europe to be able, in solidarity, to define an effective migration policy for these kinds of situations not to happen again,” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said during a news conference at U.N. headquarters in New York late Thursday.

    The EU’s executive commission says the 27-nation bloc is close to an agreement on how member countries can share responsibility in caring for migrants and refugees who undertake the dangerous journey across the Mediterranean.

    A judicial investigation is also underway into the causes of the sinking. Greek officials say the vessel capsized minutes after it lost power, speculating that panic among the passengers may have caused the boat to list and roll over.

    Most of the survivors were being moved Friday from a storage hangar at the southern port of Kalamata —where relatives also gathered to look for loved ones— to migrant shelters near Athens.

    Abdo Sheikhi, a Kurdish Syrian living in Germany, traveled to Kalamata to find out what happened to five family members who were on the boat.

    On Friday, he discovered that only his younger brother Ali and another relative had survived. He managed to speak on the phone to Ali, who had been moved to the camp near Athens.

    “(Ali) told me he jumped (off the) ship while the others could not jump,” Sheikhi said. “They were scared. They were holding on to the boat as it swayed.”

    Officials at a state-run morgue outside Athens photographed the faces of the victims and gathered DNA samples to start the identification process.

    The deadliest capsizing of a migrant boat occurred when a vessel went down off the coast of Libya en route to Italy in April 2015, killing an estimated 1,100 people.

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  • Gov. Greg Abbott’s First Group Of Texas Migrants Arrives in Los Angeles

    Gov. Greg Abbott’s First Group Of Texas Migrants Arrives in Los Angeles

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    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) announced on Wednesday that a busload of migrants from the state has arrived for the first time in Los Angeles, adding to the growing list of cities that have taken in migrants at Abbott’s order.

    “Los Angeles is a major city that migrants seek to go to, particularly now that its city leaders approved its self-declared sanctuary city status,” Abbott said in a statement released Wednesday evening. “Our border communities are on the frontlines of President Biden’s border crisis, and Texas will continue providing this much-needed relief until he steps up to do his job and secure the border.”

    According to the statement, the migrants were dropped off at Union Station in downtown Los Angeles on Tuesday evening. The arrival follows more than a year after Abbott directed the Texas Division of Emergency Management (TDEM) to charter buses of migrants released from federal custody from Texas to Washington, D.C., as a means of addressing decisions made by President Joe Biden.

    Last year, Biden announced he would end Title 42, a pandemic-era policy put in place during the Donald Trump administration that sent asylum-seekers back across the border to Mexico.

    In his letter to the TDEM in April 2022, Abbott said that Biden’s move would result in an influx of thousands of migrants in Texas, which the U.S. Department of Homeland Security “has no real plan for.” He added that Texas’ resources are “already overwhelmed” and the state would not be able to handle groups of migrants in Texas communities.

    After more than 40 migrants arrived in Los Angeles on Wednesday evening, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Brass released a statement saying that the city has executed an emergency management plan developed in advance by local, state and federal departments along with nonprofit organizations.

    “It is abhorrent that an American elected official is using human beings as pawns in his cheap political games,” Bass said in the statement. “Shortly after I took office, I directed City Departments to begin planning in the event Los Angeles was on the receiving end of a despicable stunt that Republican Governors have grown so fond of.”

    Despite disapproval of Abbott’s plan, Brass emphasized that Los Angeles “seeks to treat all people with dignity and compassion” and “will not be swayed or moved by petty politicians playing with human lives.”

    “For everything that we do, we will continue to lock arms and we will continue to lead. And we will always put people’s health and well being over politics,” she said.

    Migrants who were sent on a bus from Texas line a sidewalk near the U.S. Capitol on Aug. 11, 2022.

    Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

    Abbott has been busing migrants over the past year to other cities, including New York City, Chicago, Philadelphia and, most recently, Denver. According to the Texas Tribune, the state has sent more than 19,000 migrants to these cities, prompting city officials to speak out.

    Last month, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot wrote a letter to Abbott urging him to stop sending migrants to the city, which she described as a “dangerous and inhumane action.” Chicago has received more than 8,000 men, women and children from Texas since August and was facing a lack of shelter and resources.

    “None of these urgent needs were addressed in Texas,” Lightfoot said, referencing how nearly all of the migrants were in dire need of food, water, clothing and medical care. “Instead, these individuals and families were packed onto buses and shipped across the country like freight without regard to their personal circumstances.”

    Several groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union, as well as politicians have spoken out against Abbott’s migrant busing program. In April, the Texas Democratic Party said that Abbott is trying to “demonize immigrants.”

    “For years, Texas Republicans have looked to the Southern Border as a wedge issue, creating a narrative that stirs up emotions but neglects the truth,” the Texas Democratic Party said in a statement.

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  • California investigating migrant flights

    California investigating migrant flights

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    California investigating migrant flights – CBS News


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    California’s attorney general is investigating two flights that carried migrants from Texas to Sacramento. California is blaming Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for the flights and says they might have been illegal. Elise Preston reports.

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  • 16 migrants flown to California on chartered jet and left outside church:

    16 migrants flown to California on chartered jet and left outside church:

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    Sixteen Venezuelan and Colombian migrants who entered the country through Texas were flown to California by chartered plane and dropped off outside a church in Sacramento, California Gov. Gavin Newsom and migrant rights advocates said Saturday.

    The young men and women were dropped off Friday outside the Roman Catholic Diocese of Sacramento with only a backpack’s worth of belongings each, said Eddie Carmona, campaign director at PICO California, a faith-based community organizing group that has been assisting the migrants.

    The migrants had already been processed by U.S. immigration officials and given court dates for their asylum cases when “individuals representing a private contractor” approached them outside a migrant center in El Paso, Texas, Carmona said. They offered to help the migrants get jobs and get them to their final destination, he said.

    “They were lied to and intentionally deceived,” Carmona said, adding that the migrants had no idea where they were after being dropped off in Sacramento.

    Newsom said he and state Attorney General Rob Bonta met with the group of migrants on Saturday and learned they were transported from Texas to New Mexico and then flown by private chartered jet to Sacramento.

    In a statement Saturday night, Bonta said the migrants had documents “purporting to be from the government of the state of Florida.”

    “State-sanctioned kidnapping is not a public policy choice, it is immoral and disgusting,” Bonta wrote. 

    Migrants After The Expiration Of Title 42
    A migrant from Venezuela at a bus stop in El Paso, Texas, on May 16, 2023. 

    Jordan Vonderhaar/Bloomberg via Getty Images


    Bonta said his agency was “investigating the circumstances by which these individuals were brought to California,” and was “evaluating the potential criminal or civil action against those who transported or arranged for the transport of these vulnerable immigrants.”

    Newsom said he is also working with the California Department of Justice to find out who paid for the group’s travel and “whether the individuals orchestrating this trip misled anyone with false promises or have violated any criminal laws, including kidnapping.”

    “We are working closely with the mayor’s office, along with local and nonprofit partners to ensure the people who have arrived are treated with respect and dignity, and get to their intended destination as they pursue their immigration cases,” Newsom said in a statement.

    In the last year, Republican governors in Texas and Florida have been busing and flying migrants to Democratic strongholds without advance warning as part of a campaign to focus attention on what they say are the Biden administration’s failed border policies. 

    Last month, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said his state had started busing migrants to Denver, Colorado.

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