How the Trump Administration is using COVID-19 to end asylum
While the administration claims to be protecting public health, its attacks on asylum seekers do anything but.
While the administration claims to be protecting public health, its attacks on asylum seekers do anything but.
The Trump Administration is using the pretext of the coronavirus pandemic to intensify its years-long attack on asylum seekers.
Families requesting safe haven at the U.S. border often have no choice but to flee dangerous situations. They have the legal right to request protection in the United States, and should not be criminalized or separated from their children. Policies that turn them away expose them to dangers that have only been exacerbated by COVID-19.
Find out how the administration鈥檚 policies put asylum seekers鈥攖he majority of whom are people of color鈥攁t increased risk and threaten to destroy the asylum system as we know it. Instead of protecting the public, the new proposals appear likely to worsen our unprecedented health crisis.
Editor's note: Although the U.S. election has been called for Joe Biden, the Trump Administration has left an unsafe, unfair and broken asylum system at the U.S. border. Change will be needed on day one of the new administration to save lives and protect families. to tell the administration and Congress to commit to keeping asylum seekers safe and find out all the ways President-elect Biden can make a difference for refugees and asylum seekers.
Prior to the pandemic, the administration had taken steps to turn away families seeking safety. By placing an arbitrary daily limit on the number of asylum seekers who could be processed, and forcing asylum seekers to make their case from Mexico rather than inside the U.S., tens of thousands of people were being sent into harm鈥檚 way.
Then, in late March, the administration to immediately deny entry to non-citizens arriving at the border鈥攚ith no opportunity to request sanctuary. In just six weeks, the Customs and Border Patrol denied entry to some 20,000 people, including 400 unaccompanied children. CBP considered these cases for an average of just 96 minutes each before deciding to turn back asylum seekers without any ability to bolster their case or provide more information. Although local communities in northern Mexico have made valiant efforts to welcome those turned away at the border, services are overwhelmed and asylum seekers often find themselves at risk of the same type of violence they fled.
The administration can and should implement public health measures, including screenings carried out by public health officials, to mitigate risks to asylum seekers, and must increase access to health facilities at the border. But current policies merely compound the danger both at home and abroad.
The U.S. continues to hold tens of thousands of asylum seekers and migrants in detention centers that are notoriously overcrowded, with track records of neglect for sanitation, medical care and personal safety.
ICE is likely dramatically underreporting COVID-19 cases in these centers, by a factor of as high as fifteen. But the little data we do have suggests that over twenty percent of the asylum seekers and migrants tested while held in detention are coming back positive for the virus.
Philip*, an 探花精选 client from Democratic Republic of Congo currently detained at a private ICE facility in Texas, recounted his experience: 鈥淚CE does not respect any COVID public health measures鈥攖hey don鈥檛 pay attention to the rules. Here I am in a room with over 100 people鈥攍ike being in a crowded market. We are given soap and masks, but ICE agents do not wear masks, and do not respect quarantine鈥攚hich is especially bad since we share so many spaces and materials. I have never seen them measure a single person鈥檚 temperature.鈥
Not only has ICE refused requests to release individuals held in these dangerous conditions, the agency is further facilitating the spread of the coronavirus through deportations, sending people straight from overcrowded detention centers to countries already struggling to control the pandemic due to strained health care infrastructure. Over 450 deportation flights have taken place in 2020, with nearly a dozen countries in Latin America and the Caribbean confirming deportees returned with the virus.
Given the conditions in detention centers, all ICE detainees must be released and allowed to follow public health best practices. The administration also must halt all deportations while the pandemic is ongoing, as these are accelerating the spread of the virus. A bill in Congress, the , would end many of these harmful immigration enforcement measures that are worsening our public health crisis.
Update: September 16, 2020: The coming out about hysterectomies performed on asylum-seekers in the Irwin County ICE Detention Center in Georgia are abhorrent. The 探花精选 continues to monitor ICE鈥檚 execution of Trump Administration policies and practices that make accessing protection nearly impossible, and the conditions inside detention centers deplorable. In response to the long list of human rights violations taking place in these facilities, we plan to launch an initiative to help asylum seekers secure their release from ICE detention centers in Atlanta. We will take referrals from individuals held at the three main detention centers in Georgia, including Irwin County. For more information on the allegations themselves, follow the grassroots organization .
Thousands risk in ICE detention centers as the virus continues to surge in the U.S. & ICE deportation flights continue.
鈥 探花精选 - 探花精选 (@RESCUEorg)
探花精选's call for their release & for an immediate halt of deportations until appropriate public health measures are in place:
Seeking asylum in the U.S. has never been easy and Trump Administration policies have made it close to impossible. In June, the administration went one step further by proposing new regulations that would effectively end the asylum system as we know it鈥攏ot just during the pandemic but for years to come鈥攁nd deny asylum seekers any chance at a fair hearing.
Under the administration鈥檚 proposal, people seeking safety would face the nearly impossible task of putting together a comprehensive case for asylum at the first stage of the process. After a long, arduous journey, they would be expected to present details around the condition of their country in legal terms, documentary evidence such as police reports, expert testimony further explaining the conditions they suffered, and carefully developed legal arguments鈥攁ll while in detention and likely without legal representation. Those who arrive without a full understanding of asylum law鈥攁 high bar to clear鈥攚ould risk being permanently barred from seeking protection in the U.S.
Those able to make a case for asylum would find the qualifications narrowed. The Trump Administration wants to prohibit many claims based on gender-based harm. Domestic violence victims, people persecuted for their gender identity or sexual orientation, and feminist and LGBTQ+ advocates would find themselves barred from asylum.
鈥淚n Honduras, transgender people are persecuted and discriminated against,鈥 says Lincy Sopall, a transgender woman who fled Honduras and was granted asylum in the U.S. in 2018. 鈥淚t is not a place where you feel you can live safely. Nobody considers you a human being. Nobody thinks you have feelings. Your own country closes its doors to you.鈥
The new rule also allows for the blanket denial of claims made by victims of gang violence, a change that targets Central American asylum seekers whose countries suffer from murder rates akin to areas of war and conflict.
Despite these consequences, the administration鈥檚 rule changes continue to move forward after an insufficient and rushed 30-day public comment period.
Imagine you鈥檙e a nurse risking your life treating patients for COVID-19. You also happen to be an asylum seeker with your case still pending. Suddenly, immigration agents arrest you and you are deported or expelled to the country you had fled. The reason: you鈥檝e possibly 鈥渃ome in contact鈥 with the coronavirus in the U.S.
Under yet another administration proposal issued in July, asylum seekers can be disqualified if they come from or travel through a country where a coronavirus outbreak is 鈥減revalent or epidemic,鈥 or if they 鈥渃ome in contact鈥 with the virus鈥攅ven if they are not infected or if they have a legitimate claim to asylum. While it鈥檚 unclear how the U.S. government would determine which asylum seekers fall into these categories, the proposal would apply to asylum seekers already in the U.S. That means that the country could deport not only essential workers like nurses, but also doctors, hospital staff, and others who risk their lives responding to the pandemic. Asylum seekers who contract COVID-19 while in ICE detention centers could also be denied safety.
Alarmingly, the changes would allow the administration to extend this ban to asylum seekers and migrants with other diseases, including treatable conditions.
There is little evidence that these new policies will improve public health. Instead, the ever-expanding list is merely a continuation of Trump Administration policies that violate international legal obligations and shut the door on people seeking safety.
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The 探花精选 continues to provide emergency humanitarian programming to asylum-seekers on both sides of the U.S. southern border. The 探花精选 provides comprehensive assistance to asylum-seekers released from U.S. government detention through a collaborative shelter operation providing warm meals, clothing, transitional shelter, and travel coordination to more than 8,000 asylum-seekers since June of 2018. We are also working alongside partners to respond to asylum seekers鈥 urgent needs.
In Mexico, the 探花精选 is working with local partners to aid migrants and asylum seekers stuck in border towns. We support programs that work with women and girls who have experienced violence. We have also worked with local partners to launch a COVID-19 public health awareness campaign and establish an official quarantine center with counseling and testing for the virus. .
*Name changed for confidentiality.