Most of the migrants in Del Rio, Tex., camp have been sent to Haiti or turned back to Mexico, DHS figures show
Nick Miroff 18 hrs ago
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/most-of-the-migrants-in-del-rio-tex-camp-have-been-sent-to-haiti-or-turned-back-to-mexico-dhs-figures-show/ar-AAP3cYH?ocid=msedgntp
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In the week since the Department of Homeland Security emptied the migrant camp in Del Rio, Tex., President Biden’s Republican critics have accused his administration of releasing most of the Haitians who arrived there into the United States.
But the latest enforcement statistics appear to show the majority of the border-crossers who reached the Del Rio camp have been returned to Haiti or turned back to Mexico, according to three DHS officials and an examination of DHS data.
The Biden administration has also come under fire from immigrant advocates and some Democrats during the past 10 days for sending too many Haitians back to their destitute homeland.
The administration appears to be navigating a delicate path, using the return flights to Haiti to deter more migrants from crossing into the United States while also assuring Democrats and immigrant advocates that many Haitians are being allowed to remain in the country to apply for humanitarian protection.
When Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas appeared at the White House on Sept. 24 to announce the camp’s closure, he faced reporters who had been pressing the administration for days to disclose the number of migrants who had been released into the United States. The numbers Mayorkas provided mostly added to the fog.
About 15,000 mostly Haitian border-crossers had reached the makeshift camp under the international bridge in Del Rio, but Mayorkas cited a larger sample size, saying 30,000 migrants had crossed into Border Patrol’s Del Rio Sector between Sept. 9 and 24.
The 30,000 included all nationalities, not only Haitians, and represented a count of all those taken into custody in the Del Rio border sector — including at the camp.
Of those 30,000, more than 12,000 have been allowed to pursue their claims in U.S. immigration courts, Mayorkas said, and 8,000 “voluntarily returned to Mexico.” There were 5,000 who remained in processing, he said.
“I will tell you that it is unprecedented for us to see that number of people arrive in one discrete point along the border in such a compacted period of time,” Mayorkas said.
[Migrants have been cleared from encampment in Del Rio, Tex., homeland security chief says]
Most of the 8,000 who returned to Mexico departed the Del Rio camp, according to the three DHS officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the data. Those migrants turned back after the administration began sending planeloads of migrants to Haiti on Sept. 19, as the camp population reached its peak.
Since then, the Biden administration has shuttled more than 5,500 returnees back to Haiti, running as many as seven flights per day to Port-au-Prince and Cap-Haïtien, the country’s second-largest city. DHS officials were unable to provide further information on the current whereabouts of the 30,000 migrants Mayorkas cited a week ago.
“It would be helpful to understand the real number of Haitian migrants who have arrived and how their cases were resolved and with what criteria,” said Andrew Selee, president of the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank in Washington. “There has been some confusion around this so far.”
One of the reasons the Del Rio camp emptied so quickly — several days ahead of Mayorkas’s pledge to close it by the end of September — was the decision by so many Haitians to cross the Rio Grande back to Mexico, two DHS officials said. Many of those migrants remain in northern Mexico and still intend to cross into the United States, they acknowledged.
DHS and Customs and Border Protection officials say it is difficult to provide a more precise breakdown of enforcement outcomes among the migrants who reached the camp, because border officials collect data by sector, not by specific geographic locations.