For 10 months, Francisco Caal lived with hundreds of other asylum seekers in a tent city across the Rio Grande from Brownsville, Texas, forced by President Trump to wait there for the U.S. government to decide his fate.
He’d fled Guatemala with his wife, Jeannethe Trujillo, he says, after he endured death threats and a bullet in the gut, the couple fearing for their lives. When they reached the U.S. border and asked for asylum, immigration agents turned them back because of the Trump administration’s 2019 “Remain in Mexico” policy for asylum seekers. They waited and worried in a squalid limbo, spending their days inside a homemade from ragged tarps lashed to the camp’s chain-link fence, all with a view of U.S. soil, just 70 feet away.
They prayed that Covid-19 wouldn’t get them before they were allowed to cross to “the other side,” as the camp dwellers, who came from Central America, Cuba, Haiti, and Venezuela, call the U.S. “We just put ourselves in God’s hands,” Caal, 52, said on Feb. 24, sitting on a log inside the makeshift home as his wife cooked some black beans over their little fire pit.
On Feb. 25, a month after President Biden ordered an end to Remain in Mexico, aid workers told Caal and Trujillo to report to a United Nations clinic in the camp for a Covid test and be ready to move. A few hours later, they were among the first 27 people allowed to cross the Gateway International Bridge to Brownsville. As of March 2, more than 500 had followed, about three-quarters of the camp’s population, according to UN agencies coordinating the effort in Mexico.
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Bu hikaye Bloomberg Businessweek dergisinin March 08, 2021 sayısından alınmıştır.
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