The Venezuelans who left too late: migrants stranded by abrupt Biden policy


The news could not have reached Remira Alarsa at a worse moment.

Since leaving her home in Venezuela last month, the former teacher, her husband and nephew had trekked thousands of miles through seven countries, determined to resettle in the US – only to be robbed of their savings in Guatemala.

Soon afterwards, she learned that it might all have been for nothing.

On 12 October, the Biden administration announced that it would deport Venezuelan migrants to Mexico, under a previously obscure public health law, Title 42, which was used for summary expulsions by the Trump administration and has been continued under Joe Biden.

Venezuelans arriving at the southern border will no longer be able to join their families in the US while they wait their turn in the asylum process, but will be forced to languish in Mexico, where they are routinely targeted for rape, robbery and extortion.

The abrupt implementation of Title 42 for Venezuelans has created an arbitrary cutoff, and left tens of thousands to an uncertain future.

Alarsa is now in Tapachula, a migrant hub on the Mexico-Guatemala border where refugees are processed by the Mexican government. With the length of Mexico still ahead of her and at least two weeks before she reaches the US border and her fate with it, she must decide whether to turn back or forge ahead.

“We have to keep going, as there is no other option. I keep trying to tell myself that I didn’t leave two weeks too late, that this was the perfect timing. But at every stop, money is taken from you, little by little. And now we’re going to have to pay a lot more,” Alarsa said.

Critics of Title 42 say it represents a gutting of the right to request asylum for vulnerable people with few other options.

“Just at the moment that the Biden administration is fighting a lawsuit to try to end Title 42, they are also expanding it, which is just baffling. We’ve lost just about any pretense that this is a health measure. They are using a backdoor way to end the right to asylum,” said Adam Isacson, director of the Defense Oversight Program at the Washington Office on Latin America.

Nearly 7 million Venezuelans have fled economic collapse and political repression since 2018, most of them settling elsewhere in South America. But this year has seen an unprecedented surge of migrants from the country walking north.

In most recent years, the number of Venezuelans detained at the US southern border has been fewer than 100, but between November 2021 and September 2022, about 150,000 Venezuelans have made the dangerous journey over land to the US.

“If they deport me to Mexico, I’ll stay and work here. I’ll work anywhere they let me – economically, every option would be better than going back to Venezuela. I was making twenty dollars a month in Caracas!” said Alcides Granado, who was lounging in Tapachula’s central plaza, sheltering from the punishing sun under a floppy cloth hat.

But in another shock to those still heading north, Venezuelans deported over the past week have received a notice from the Mexican government upon their arrival, demanding that they leave the country within 15 days exactly how they came – through the southern…



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