going home
going home

By Janita Kan

Thousands of migrants who have been sent back to Mexico to wait for courts to process their asylum claims under the Trump administration’s “Remain in Mexico” policy are starting to voluntarily return home, according to a new report released by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

The Trump administration had ramped up efforts in the past year to address the influx of illegal immigrants crossing into the United States and restore integrity to the immigration system. One of the administration’s top priorities is to end loopholes resulting from the current “catch and release” policy, where migrants are released into the interior of the country as they await a court hearing, often never to be seen again.

The administration implemented the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), more commonly known as the “Remain in Mexico” policy, at the beginning of the year as an attempt to curb the flow of illegal immigration and prevent fraudulent or non-meritorious cases. The policy sends migrants back to Mexico while they wait for a court to process their claims.

The department said in a recent report assessing the effectiveness of the MPP (pdf) that a “significant proportion” of migrants without meritorious claims that were sent back to Mexico had chosen to abandon their asylum claim.

They said, citing Customs and Border Protection (CBP) numbers, over 55,000 immigrants had been sent to Mexico under the MPP but there are currently only about 20,000 people that are sheltered in northern Mexico, near the U.S. border, waiting to enter the United States.

This has led the department to conclude that “aliens without meritorious claims—which no longer constitute a free ticket into the United States—are beginning to voluntarily return home.”

The MPP assessment, released on Oct. 28, found that the policy had demonstrated operational effectiveness by reducing the number of illegal immigrant apprehensions and restoring integrity to the immigration system.

DHS said they were able to see a connection between the MPP and the declining number of apprehensions at the southern border. Since May, where the number of apprehensions hit its peak at 144,000, the number of detained or those found inadmissible at ports of entry decreased by 64 percent through to September.

This was also around the time when the United States and Mexico reached a deal that saw an expanded implementation of the MPP.

“Although MPP is one among many tools that DHS has employed in response to the border crisis, DHS has observed a connection between MPP implementation and decreasing enforcement actions at the border—including a rapid and substantial decline in apprehensions in those areas where the most amenable aliens have been processed and returned to Mexico pursuant to MPP,” the department stated.

The department also said the policy is helping migrants with meritorious claims by granting relief or protection within months as opposed to years.

“The Migrant Protection Protocols has been a key component to the success we have had addressing the crisis,” said Acting Secretary Kevin McAleenan, while announcing the expansion of the policy to in Eagle Pass, Texas.

“We are confident in the program’s integrity and ability to adjudicate asylum claims quickly and with all due process. We have already seen individuals granted asylum, and many more fraudulent or non-meritorious cases closed,” he continued.

“MPP has been–and remains–an essential part of these efforts. I am grateful to the government of Mexico for their partnership, including accepting MPP returns at Eagle Pass.”

Resistance to the MPP

The implementation of the MPP has not been without resistance with critics arguing that the policy puts migrant lives at risk by forcing them to wait in Mexico, which is plagued with crime and violence.

Following its implementation, 11 Central Americans and legal advocacy groups initiated a lawsuit against the Trump administration, known as the case Innovation Law Lab v. Nielsen.

In May, a federal appeals court allowed the Trump administration policy to proceed.

Meanwhile in August, dozens of Senate Democrats sent a letter (pdf) to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and McAleenan calling for the end of the policy.

“Not only does this policy do nothing to protect either migrants or U.S. interests, but we have grave concerns about its legality, recent efforts to expand it, and the dangerous conditions it forces asylum seekers to endure while waiting for their cases to be heard,” the senators argued.

McAleenan, who tendered his resignation last month, argued in a speech at Georgetown University on Oct. 7 that the MPP has “led to a safer and more orderly process along the Southwest Border.”

“MPP enhances the integrity of the system, by getting immigration court results at much faster pace than the non-detained docket in the U.S., while keeping families together, and, without keeping them in custody,” he said.

“It is expressly provided for in law, and conducted in partnership with Mexico, who has committed to appropriate humanitarian protections and work authorization in Mexico for migrants in the adjudication process.”

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