Fantasies Clash with Cruel Realities for Migrant Women at the Border

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'A recent Supreme Court ruling allows the Trump administration to deport to Mexico thousands of migrants who have waited months to present legitimate claims for asylum.' Ms. reports on the cruel realities for migrant women at the border:

A recent Supreme Court ruling allows the Trump administration to deport to Mexico thousands of migrants who have waited months to present legitimate claims for asylum. During a recent investigative trip with the Women’s Refugee Commission, I met many of these desperate would-be immigrants—who suffered inhumane living conditions in detention centers on both sides of the border.

Instead, the administration’s actions caused chaos, confusion and even larger numbers of asylum seekers who are restricted from accessing attorneys or even the basic due process of law they deserve. ICE has been managing about two-thirds of this high security incarceration facility and paying $138 per day for each of the 966 emigrants being held here—more than $2,000 per month of taxpayer dollars. This represented a substantial profit for the private corporation. The term “prison industrial complex” popped into my head, and I vowed to look into its lobbying impact on Capitol Hill.

When I sat down at a round table, 10 black women crowded around me, each eager to talk about the long and treacherous journeys they had survived since fleeing extreme violence at home. These women talked about having been attacked by both police and their French-speaking neighbors. One described how her store was destroyed, and she was raped and tortured in the back of a truck. She fled the country, taking nothing.

“We have no money to buy phone cards for international calls or to find a lawyer,” Betta, her hair stacked in circles like a crown of cornrows, told me. “I don’t know why I am here, when I will get out, or where I can go.” Before arriving here three months ago, she had spent a month in Tijuana and two weeks at the San Ysidro Port of Entry. “My aunt lives in Maryland,” she said, “but they won’t let me go to her.

 

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