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Monday, April 15, 2024

Record number of Chinese migrants arrested for illegally crossing into US

 The number of Chinese migrants illegally crossing the US-Mexico border has hit a new record with 24,200 arrested in the last six months, mostly in San Diego County, California, according to federal data.

The huge influx is already equal to the number of Chinese people arrested for illegally crossing into the US in 2023 — which itself set a record for being more than in the previous ten years combined.

Taking advantage of holes in the border wall and the Biden administration’s lax enforcement of border policy, Chinese people are buying plane tickets to Mexico and paying smugglers to take them to the areas where its easiest to cross into California.

Chinese migrants wait for Border Patrol in Campo, CaliforniaJames Breeden for New York Post

Overwhelmed Customs and Border Protection (CBP) then arrest the individuals, mostly single men, and keep them in detention for 24 to 48 hours for processing, before releasing them into the US to pursue asylum claims, according to sources.

Migrants from China wait for Border Patrol to come and arrest them after crossing into California. They will then be processed into the country and released onto the streets of San Diego.James Breeden for New York Post
In January security concerns were raised after it emerged CBP cut the number of questions its processors were required to ask from roughly 40 to just five — because they were overwhelmed by the number of Chinese people they were arresting.

A family of Chinese migrants who had just crossed over the border in the last few days told The Post they had no immediate problems forcing them to leave their homeland, unlike migrants from countries like Haiti and Venezuela where civil order has largely broken down.

They said they had spent around $75,000 to come to the US, money earned from their business back in China, after hearing success stories from relatives who had already made it across.

“We went from Thailand and Turkey and we followed a route shared on social media,” they said.

Another group of Chinese migrants waiting for Border Patrol in Campo, a remote stretch of the Mountain Empire area of southeastern San Diego County, told The Post their journey had taken many weeks from China and they were ultimately headed for New York.

A family of Chinese migrants who had just crossed over the border in the last few days told The Post they had no immediate problems forcing them to leave their homeland.James Breeden for New York Post

The migrants wait to be found and picked up by Border Patrol, who escort them across the dangerous mountain region into custody where they are evaluated to see if they have a genuine asylum claim.

In addition to the 24,000 arrested for crossing illegally, 17,700 Chinese migrants have been legally admitted into the US after making arrangements to enter the country through the CBP One mobile app.

“There are families who have experienced political oppression at the hands of the Chinese government and many are political dissidents,” immigration attorney Erika Pinheiro previously told The Post.

“We have this understanding of asylum seekers as poor and [that] they are only coming to America for economic opportunities, but the people that I’m meeting [at the San Diego] border tend to be at least middle class, if not upper-middle class.”

Chinese migrants wait for Border Patrol in Campo.James Breeden for New York Post

Those who are released from border patrol custody are taken by bus to San Diego and left at a local trolley station. There a group of Chinese men operate informal ‘taxis’ for those from their homeland.

The men told The Post they’re present to assist members of their own community because they don’t speak English and or know where to go.

“When they first arrive here, they don’t understand the language and are very scared. When they meet us, they will feel at ease,” one of the Chinese men waiting for migrants told The Post.

“The Chinese man who just got off the bus had his phone, wallet and ID stolen in Mexico. I will arrange accommodations for him tonight and treat him to a meal. I will also help him contact his family,” he said speaking through a translation app.

A gap in the border wall in Campo, CaliforniaJames Breeden for New York Post

However, the same group attempted to block The Post from taking photos and recording them.

Local officials also expressed concern about the informal and unlicensed taxi line, concerned with the security of both the local communities and the migrants themselves, who are in a particularly vulnerable position.

“I am very concerned about the fact some of these Chinese cab drivers are not just here picking anybody up, they’re picking up only Chinese people, mostly Chinese women,” El Cajon Mayor Bill Wells told The Post.

“There’s no coordinated effort, there’s nobody there from the federal government, there’s nobody there from the city of San Diego or even the county of San Diego anymore [to help] so they’re bewildered and they’re vulnerable people,” San Diego County Supervisor Jim Desmond told The Post.

https://nypost.com/2024/04/15/us-news/record-number-of-chinese-migrants-cross-into-us/

US soldier shoots migrant during border-crosser stabbing near El Paso as rising violence continues

 A National Guardsman shot a migrant while responding to a stabbing involving illegal border-crossers in the El Paso area Sunday, as violence in the region continues to escalate.

US soldiers who have been deployed to the area to try to contain the constant flood of illegal crossings from Mexico to the States were notified of one migrant stabbing another at the edge of the Rio Grande River near Texas’ razor-wire fencing in the afternoon, according to an internal US Border Patrol memo.

One of the responding guardsmen ended up shooting a migrant at the scene. The shot man fled back to Mexico.

The area where the incident happened is near Gate 36, a hot spot for illegal crossings and where hundreds of migrants stormed the razor wire and assaulted National Guard soldiers just a few weeks ago.

A Border Patrol memo detailed Sunday’s disturbing migrant violence around El Paso.

Two migrants were treated for non-life-threatening injuries after Sunday’s incident and reportedly headed into the custody of Border Patrol, while the area was subsequently secured by Texas Department of Public Safety troopers.


Texas National Guardsmen and other law enforcement recently faced off with migrants in the El Paso area.James Breeden for NY Post

Migrants in the area have become more brazen, a National Guard source told The Post after the riot at Gate 35 a few weeks ago.

Texas has since charged 214 migrants with rioting and nine others tagged as ringleaders with felonies over the incident.

At least one migrant had allegedly stomped on one responding soldier’s knees. US law enforcement also confiscated knives and shanks from members of the mob.

A migrant climbs over Texas’ border fence earlier this month.AFP via Getty Images
Hundreds of migrants storm the border in El Paso.James Breeden for NY Post
Texas troops erect more fencing and razor wire at the border.James Breeden for NY Post

“These people were willing to assault military,” the source told The Post at the time. “They were willing to assault law enforcement. They have complete disregard for our laws.”

The Texas DPS was able to identify the group of rioters by reviewing The Post’s video of the altercation.

The state deployed hundreds more troops to El Paso and has placed more wire and fencing along the border to deter illegal crossings after the massive rush.

https://nypost.com/2024/04/15/us-news/us-soldier-shoots-migrant-around-el-paso-during-border-crosser-stabbing/

'Cuba calls on US to ease sanctions on eve of migration talks'

 Cuba on Monday said it would insist the U.S. ease sanctions and end special treatment of Cubans illegally entering its territory at high level migration talks slated to begin Tuesday in Washington.

The twice annual meetings resumed in 2022 after being suspended during the U.S. presidency of Donald Trump and amid a record surge of around half a million Cubans illegally entering the United States beginning in 2021, according to U.S. authorities.

Cuba is mired in a deep economic crisis characterized by shortages of basic goods, run-away inflation and blackouts.

The talks' stated aim is to promote safe, legal and orderly migration between the two countries.

Johana Tablada de la Torre, deputy director for U.S. affairs in Cuba's foreign ministry, expressed frustration at not reaching those goals while stating the talks remained important as one of the few points of contact under the administration of President Joe Biden.

"The blockade (sanctions) ... is what most weighs in on the bilateral migration situation," Tablada told a press conference in Havana.

Cuba's Communist government has long blamed U.S. sanctions for strangling the island's economy and the 1966 Cuban Adjustment Act, which grants special entry rights to Cubans and support upon arrival, for encouraging its youth to emigrate.

The United States - the top destination for Cuban migrants – counters that a lack of civil liberties and human rights in Cuba have combined with a state-dominated economy to force its citizens to migrate.

The Biden administration has increased legal pathways to migration for Cubans, including visa access in Havana, family reunification and humanitarian parole programs aimed at stemming illegal migration.

Tablada said the measures would not solve the problem as long as sanctions remained in place.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/cuba-calls-us-ease-sanctions-215303606.html