Biden win bolsters asylum seekers' hopes of policy shift
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Biden win bolsters asylum seekers' hopes of policy shift

US Election 2020

Reuters
08 November, 2020, 11:55 am
Last modified: 08 November, 2020, 12:04 pm

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Biden win bolsters asylum seekers' hopes of policy shift

Cheers and chanting broke out in a Matamoros refugee camp and among Cubans in gritty Ciudad Juarez, a reflection of awakening hope that the next president will unwind a virtual ban on asylum in the United States

Reuters
08 November, 2020, 11:55 am
Last modified: 08 November, 2020, 12:04 pm
Cuban migrants, under the "Remain in Mexico" program, celebrate after media announced that Democratic US presidential nominee Joe Biden has won the 2020 US presidential election in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico November 7, 2020. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez
Cuban migrants, under the "Remain in Mexico" program, celebrate after media announced that Democratic US presidential nominee Joe Biden has won the 2020 US presidential election in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico November 7, 2020. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez

The news and celebrations spread fast among communities of asylum seekers stranded from Tijuana to Matamoros more than 1,500 miles along the US-Mexican border on Saturday - Joe Biden had won the race for the White House.

The Democratic former vice president was declared the victor by major television networks on Saturday, even as President Donald Trump filed lawsuits, alleging fraud without providing evidence, and said the race was "far from over."

Cheers and chanting broke out in a Matamoros refugee camp and among Cubans in gritty Ciudad Juarez, a reflection of awakening hope that the next president will unwind a virtual ban on asylum in the United States.

"No more Trump!" the Cubans yelled in Ciudad Juarez, just across from El Paso, Texas.

Trump's "Remain in Mexico" policy has required more than 66,000 migrants to wait in Mexico as their claims snake through US courts.

All week long, the asylum seekers have held their breath amid an election that many said would determine their future.

Some implored relatives in the United States to turn out to vote against Trump. Dozens in the sprawling Matamoros camp spent election night singing hymns, praying for a Biden victory, or huddled around the camp's charging station glued to their telephones.

On Friday, a row of shiny metal balloons spelling out "Bye Trump" was displayed in the camp. On Saturday, the news many had been waiting for finally arrived.

"We're all going to celebrate today!" said Dairon Elisondo, a Cuban who works as a doctor in the Matamoros camp, a sprawling makeshift encampment that has become a symbol of the Trump administration's crackdown on immigration.

"Everyone is so happy," he added.

But, for many, the celebration came with a question: Would Biden really follow through with the pro-migrant promises he's made on the campaign trail?

"He (Biden) has said a lot of pretty words about us migrants, so I think he should have to complete everything that he's promised us," said Rubinaldo Cantillo Martínez, a Cuban asylum seeker.

Remain In Mexico?

The Trump administration has progressively tightened US law to the point that it is now all but impossible to apply for asylum along the US southern border.

Biden has promised to end many of these policies, including the "Remain in Mexico" program, although there are few details so far on how he will do it. Immigration experts say it could be difficult for the incoming president to untangle Trump's series of overlapping policies and restrictions.

Yuri Gonzalez, another Cuban asylum seeker, said that although he was thrilled by the US election result, he's now bracing himself for any final policies Trump might try to enact before Biden takes office.

"Let's see Trump's reaction from now until January," Gonzalez said. "I don't think he's going to be a good loser."

Back in Matamoros, Honduran asylum seeker Oscar Borjas said he didn't think the camp will be dismantled anytime soon. Even with Biden taking over, he estimates it could be at least another year until he and others could enter the United States while pursuing their claims, as was the pre-Trump administration policy.

"But it doesn't matter," he said. "The main thing is that we can't return to our countries."

Borjas said he fled Honduras after surviving threats and an assassination attempt linked to his political organizing activities against the ruling party. Reuters could not independently verify that.

Overall, the mood among asylum seekers was buoyant that the Trump era had seemingly come to an end, even if open questions remain about how - and how quickly - a Biden presidency could change their fate.

"After so much darkness the light may arrive," Elisondo said.

World+Biz

US migration / US immigrant / asylum seekers / US asylum / asylum-seekers / asylum seeker / Biden Presidency / Biden / Biden-Harris administration / Joe Biden

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