After traveling 2,000 miles for asylum, this family's journey halts at a bridge

After traveling 2,000 miles for asylum, this family's journey halts at a bridge

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The Berduo family traveled nearly 2,000 miles from Guatemala to the international bridge between Matamoros, Mexico, and Brownsville, Texas, but they could go no further. Under a new policy,


federal border agents stationed in the middle of international bridges are turning away asylum seekers like the Berduos, telling them there is no room in U.S. Customs and Border Protection


stations for them. Since arriving on Monday, the family said they had tried three times to cross into the U.S., and three times border agents turned them back. On Tuesday, the nine family


members, who range in age from 58 years to nine months, sat glumly at a picnic table on the Mexican side of the bridge. "We've been here on the border for two days asking for


asylum, but the U.S. government won't pay attention to us," said Victor Samuel Berduo, the family patriarch, with an expression of resigned exasperation. "They tell us to wait


or go to a different bridge. But we don't know any other bridges." Immigrant advocates say these are the latest victims of White House policies meant to discourage asylum seekers


from coming to the nation's borders to ask for protection. Up and down the southwest border, courtrooms are packed with immigrants arrested for unlawful entry. Youth shelters are


filling up with immigrant children. Migrants are worried because Attorney General Jeff Sessions has sharply curtailed which cases qualify for asylum. And now, border agents have begun


turning away asylum seekers at ports of entry, telling them to come back another time. That leaves some immigrants, like the Berduos, in limbo. "If we go back home," Berduo said,


"they will kill us." Then, in a gruesome show and tell, he presented his 23-year-old son, Wayner. He removed sunglasses to reveal a left eye socket mangled by a bullet, and he


pulled away a towel to show an ugly scar that zigzags up the length of his right arm, the result of four more bullets. His father said a drug lord sent two assassins to kill his sons one day


last December. As Victor explained it, his boys made a living taking tourists to a place called the Blue Waterfall in the Peten province of northern Guatemala. But the narco owns the


property and doesn't like visitors. Berduo's wife, Estafania, opens a plastic bag containing a stack of papers, the documentation they will use to back up their plea for asylum.


One document, that bears an official-looking stamp and a signature from a local judge, affirms the family is a victim of "real threats" and urges any "civil, military or


diplomatic" authority in a receiving country to allow them "to live peacefully." Customs and Border Protection, which is in charge of the nation's border crossings, says


it is overwhelmed with asylum seekers fleeing domestic abuse and gang violence in Central America. Statistics show a 58 percent jump in families and a 14 percent increase in unaccompanied


children asking for protection at ports of entry this year compared to last year. Agents have been posted in the middle of pedestrian bridges across the U.S.-Mexico border to check documents


and turn away applicants. "No one is being denied the opportunity to make a claim of credible fear or seek asylum. CBP officers allow more people into our facilities for processing


once space becomes available," the agency says in a statement. Immigrant advocates say this is just the latest obstacle for asylum seekers under the Trump administration. Under a new


"zero tolerance" policy announced last month, immigrants who cross the border illegally will be prosecuted, even if they are seeking asylum, and they may have their children taken


away and sent to government-contracted shelters. Then, earlier this week, Sessions narrowed the path to asylum and said domestic abuse would no longer be accepted as a valid claim. Christina


Patiño Houle, director of the Rio Grande Valley Equal Voice Network, says the administration is giving a mixed message. Federal officials are telling asylum applicants to stop wading across


the river and entering unlawfully. Rather, they should come through an official port of entry. "A message is being broadcast across the nation that migrants should be seeking asylum


through official channels, and it's just not possible," Patiño Houle says. "What we're seeing on the ground is that people are being turned away. They're being told


that either there's no room or they cannot enter the bridge." U.S. officials say there may be a holdup at some bridges but that, ultimately, immigrants who wait a matter of hours


or days are permitted to enter. "Port of Entry facilities were not designed to hold hundreds of people at a time who may be seeking asylum," CBP says in its statement. But there


are not hundreds of migrants a day trying to cross the Matamoros/Brownsville bridge, according to Mexican officials interviewed on the Matamoros side. They estimate only 10 to 15 asylum


seekers show up a day, and they're surprised that U.S. agents are saying there's no room in their station. Late Tuesday, the Berduo family decided to try again. They pick up their


bags and troop up the concrete walkway that spans the murky, sluggish Rio Grande. Two immigration agents sweating in dark blue uniforms await them at the top of the bridge. "Did you


bring documents to enter?" one of them asks. Victor Berduo answers, "We are asking for asylum because we cannot return to Guatemala." The officers frown and call a supervisor


when they see a reporter with a microphone accompanying the Guatemalan family. The supervisor is bald and wears sunglasses. He examines their papers and passports. He tells the reporter to


stop recording. "You can either stop or we won't do anything," he says. The reporter answers that he is on the Mexican side of the international boundary. "It


doesn't matter," the supervisor replies. "I'm actually trying to help them." Another agent gets a call on his radio: "We have room for one family." The


agent tells the Berduos family they will only accept three people: their daughter-in-law, Yeni Johary Leal Cruz, and her two small children. The six remaining family members will have to


return to Mexico and wait. On this sweltering afternoon, American tourists are passing by on the bridge walkway, carrying bottles of tequila and pictures of Pancho Villa, and looking on


quizzically as an anxious family conversation ensues. "We can't do it. We're one family. She always goes with us," says an anguished Estefania. The agents are adamant:


They will only take three. Finally, the family relents. The 20-year-old daughter-in-law, her eyes brimming with tears, collects her children, a nine-month-old and a two-year-old. The agent


shoulders her pink backpack and escorts her into America. The rest of the family walks back down the concrete bridge to the picnic area on the south side of the river to wait some more.


"Tomorrow I hope they'll attend us and our family can be complete again," says Victor Berduo, hopefully. "This is what we want." Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more,


visit https://www.npr.org.