They missed their U.S. court dates because they were kidnapped. Now they're blocked from applying fo
Source: Washington Post
They missed their U.S. court dates because they were kidnapped. Now theyre blocked from applying for asylum.
By Kevin Sieff
April 24, 2021 at 12:16 p.m. EDT
MATAMOROS, Mexico Carolina had memorized the date, but she triple-checked her documents just to make sure. For months, her life had revolved around the court hearing at which she could finally make her asylum claim.
Like tens of thousands of asylum seekers who reached the U.S. border during the Trump administration, the 36-year-old from Honduras had been sent to wait in Mexico for her immigration hearing. She was told to return to the border on her court date.
So on Feb. 26, 2020, she woke up early and put on her best blouse. She said a short prayer. But not long after her bus left for Laredo, Tex., gunmen stopped the vehicle. They kidnapped Carolina and her 15-year-old daughter, took them to a stash house packed with other kidnapped migrants and demanded thousands of dollars in ransom.
By the time they were released a few days later, Carolina had missed her day in court.
Her asylum case, it turned out, had been closed in absentia because she hadnt shown up. Of the 68,000 asylum cases processed under the Trump-era Migrant Protection Protocols, the policy also know as Remain in Mexico, 28,000 were closed for the same reason: Because asylum seekers didnt present themselves.
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Read more:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/04/24/mexico-border-migrant-asylum-mpp/