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Biden immigration policy stirs confusion at Mexico border

Biden immigration policy stirs confusion at Mexico border Molly Hennessy-Fiske © (Veronica G. Cardenas / For The Times) Salvadoran asylum seeker Karla Rivera Hernandez, 24, holds her 1-year-old son Mateo A. Rivera on Thursday at a bus station in Brownsville, Texas, as they wait to go to the airport. (Veronica G. Cardenas / For The Times) Days after crossing the Rio Grande on a smuggler’s raft, Salvadoran migrant Karla Rivera Hernandez cradled her toddler Mateo on Thursday at a bus station on the Texas border as they prepared to travel to join a cousin in New York. Rivera, 24, a single mother working as a cook, left for the border last month hoping President Biden’s new immigration policies would allow her to stay in the U.S.

Report: Biden Reopens Catch and Release for Migrants Families

WashPost: Mexico Ends Trump-Era Border Cooperation

WashPost: Mexico Ends Trump-Era Border Cooperation 4 Feb 2021 Mexico has stopped accepting the return of most migrants caught at the U.S. border, prompting U.S. officials to release them into the United States, according to the Washington Post. The Mexican government has stopped taking back Central American families “expelled” at the U.S. border under a Trump-era emergency health order related to the coronavirus, a shift that has prompted U.S. Customs and Border Protection to release more parents and children into the U.S. interior, according to five U.S. officials. […] Mexico’s new policy has been applied unevenly. In Nogales, for example, families continued to be returned to Mexico deposited on the streets rather than taken to family shelters. In a number of border cities, families continue to be returned to Mexico.

They risked Covid, cartels — now U S asylum-seekers in Mexico place hope on Biden

They risked Covid, cartels now U.S. asylum-seekers in Mexico place hope on Biden Gabe Gutierrez and Suzanne Gamboa © Provided by NBC News MATAMOROS, Mexico Angelica Matos, who fled Venezuela, where her husband was tortured and jailed, has endured fears of violence and the spread of Covid-19, all in the hope that the United States would again open its doors to asylum-seekers after the Trump administration s restrictive policies. Others who had similar hopes gave up. But after a year and a half of waiting in Mexico, Matos is clinging to a kernel of possibility that the new president, Joe Biden, will once again give people like her the refuge and safety that could come if they are granted asylum.

Team Brownsville recibe reconocimiento de la ciudad

Team Brownsville recibe reconocimiento de la ciudad
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