Migration: Huge migrant camp in Del Rio – USA deport people

Migration: Huge migrant camp in Del Rio – USA deport people

Within a few days, the situation in a small Texas town on the southern border of the USA has come to a head: Thousands of migrants have come to the village and are now waiting under a bridge. The US is tough.

US authorities want to quickly remove thousands of migrants who have gathered in the border town of Del Rio within a few days.

Most recently, around 3,000 people were relocated in one day, said Minister of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas on Monday during a visit to Del Rio. He emphasized that everyone should be sent back to their countries of origin. The majority of migrants come from the desperately poor Caribbean state of Haiti.

Thousands of people had taken the opportunity in the past few days to walk in the Rio Grande border river from Mexico to Texas with low water levels. They gathered under the bridge that spans the Rio Grande. The Mayor of Del Rio spoke of more than 14,500 people on Saturday. On Sunday it was reportedly still well over 10,000. They stay there in makeshift tents and live in inhumane conditions. Mayorkas emphasized that the situation worsened very quickly.

White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Monday the situation in Del Rio was difficult and it was devastating to see the pictures from there. The US government is working to bring migrants back to their homes quickly, and to improve the situation for those waiting on site and to provide the people with meals and the like. Psaki reiterated the US government’s message to migrants that it was not the time to go to the US.

For the administration of US President Joe Biden, domestic political pressure is increasing in view of the rapidly growing immigrant camp. Conservatives accuse the White House of a too lax immigration policy, while at the same time the living conditions of the people under the bridge are criticized. Human rights organizations condemned the US government’s actions.

Numerous Haitians fled to South American countries such as Chile and Brazil after the devastating earthquake of 2010 with more than 200,000 deaths. Among other things, because of discrimination there and because of the economic consequences of the pandemic, many of them now dared the long, dangerous journey north, according to media reports. Their Caribbean homeland is dominated by poverty, violence and political chaos. Only in mid-August did the earth shake violently again – more than 2000 people died. In July, President Jovenel Moïse was shot dead in his residence near Port-au-Prince.

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