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Page 11 - மெக்ஸிகோ தேசிய இடம்பெயர்வு நிறுவனம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Immigration raids sweep Mexico as Central American exit grows under Biden

7 Min Read APIZACO, Mexico (Reuters) - Mexico has stepped up immigration raids hauling hundreds of people off trains in recent weeks to stem an increase in Central American migrants heading for the United States since President Joe Biden took office, according to advocates and data from immigration authorities. FILE PHOTO: A member of the Mexican National Guard observes migrants after they crossed into El Paso, Texas, U.S., to turn themselves in to request asylum, as seen from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico February 11, 2021. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez The crackdown by immigration agents backed by the military and police marks an escalation of Mexico’s efforts to control migration across its territory.

Immigration raids sweep Mexico as Central American exit grows under Biden

Immigration raids sweep Mexico as Central American exit grows under Biden
reuters.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from reuters.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Mexico: Abuses Against Asylum Seekers at US Border

Venezuelans, Others Face Kidnapping, Extortion, Lack of Essential Services (Washington, DC, March 5, 2021) – Asylum seekers sent to Mexico by the administration of former US president Donald Trump have suffered violence and extortion by Mexican police, immigration agents, and criminal groups, Human Rights Watch said today. Since January 2019, the United States has effectively closed its southern border to asylum seekers, leaving many to face abuses in Mexico. The Trump administration, under its Remain in Mexico program, sent more than 71,000 asylum seekers to Mexico to await asylum hearings. Additionally, since March 2020, the US has expelled migrants more than 400,000 times, many to Mexico, including asylum seekers who were denied the chance to make their claims, under travel restrictions purportedly to prevent the spread of Covid-19.

Aiding Central America s Women on the Run

Aiding Central America s Women on the Run Gabriela Díaz Prieto and Sarah Gammage January 19, 2016 A fence at the U.S. border. (Photo: BBC World Service) Norma remains in a detention center in the United States, where she awaits the resolution of her asylum petition. She left a neighborhood in El Salvador, controlled by the M-18 Gang, at the end of 2014. Four members of the gang kidnapped her, took her to a cemetery where they raped her and then threw her in a trashcan all an attempt to send a message to her husband, a Salvadoran police officer. Reporting the violence only made things worse; shortly after the incident Norma and other members of her family began to receive death threats.

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