Reuters/ Washington
Immigration advocates have criticised President Joe Biden’s asylum policies, saying that expulsions of migrants at the US-Mexico border and other deterrent measures were “cruel, unlawful, and ineffective”.
In a letter to Biden and top officials, more than 100 organisations urged the Democratic president to restore the ability of all migrants to claim asylum in the United States and eschew any new policies that limit asylum access.
Promising a more humane immigration approach, Biden has reversed many of the restrictive policies of his Republican predecessor, Donald Trump.
However, the Democratic president has kept an order known as Title 42, one of Trump’s most limiting measures which allows US authorities to expel migrants caught crossing the border back to Mexico.
Border arrests have risen to 20-year highs in recent months, fuelling Republican criticism that Biden’s decision to roll back some Trump restrictions has encouraged more people to cross into the United States.
At the same time, some Democrats have pressed Biden to end Title 42 and advocates for asylum-seekers say the administration’s actions contradict what Biden promised.
The administration says the expulsions are necessary to keep US detention centres from becoming overwhelmed during the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic, which they argue would create a risk for government workers, migrants and the public.
White House spokesperson Vedant Patel said the administration deferred to health experts on decisions related to Title 42, which was issued by the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The groups urged Biden not to adopt any policies that force migrants to wait in Mexico for the resolution of their US cases, which they said “would unquestionably put individuals in danger and violate US asylum law”.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said on Thursday that the United States would expand an online asylum registration system in the hopes migrants will apply remotely.
The official also added that more changes would be announced in the coming days.
Last week, the government began flying some Central American and Mexican migrants arrested at the US-Mexico border to southern Mexico in an effort to deter crossers.
In the letter to the US president, the groups said that they were “gravely concerned” about the flights and reports that migrants were then bussed to a remote part of Guatemala.
Marielena Hincapié, executive director of the Los Angeles-based National Immigration Law Centre, said the flights signalled the Biden administration was taking a more restrictive stance.
She said it appears Biden is focusing only on arrests and deportation and not on the rights of the asylum-seekers.
“That absolutely contradicts what the Biden administration said they were going to do,” she said.
Representatives of Venezuela government, opposition launch talks in Mexico
Powerful Haiti quake kills more than 200
Moderate Democrats add to division over Biden agenda
US’s white population falls for first time: census
US to send 3,000 troops to evacuate embassy staff in Kabul
Trump blames Biden for Taliban surge
Aztec spirit continues to live on in Mexico after 500 years
US federal healthcare staff must be vaccinated
Car 'graveyard' a monument to the power of China's record floods
There are no comments.