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One of the largest inhabitants deflections in the world has been the Pabón family, who is one of the almost 8 million Venezuelans who have fled their nation in the past ten years.
Following a six-month voyage through seven nations and countless yards, the family made their way to Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, across the border from El Paso, on December 1, 2022. They had fled their country at a time when the United States had agreed to suspend Venezuelans who were already living there because Washington had forged political agreements with Nicolás Maduro, the government’s president. In Mexico’s border places like Juarez, hundreds of new Venezuelan immigrants hoped to profit from the beginning.
However, by the time the Pabóns arrived, the United States had reversed program and placed Residents under many of the same regulations as people of other nationalities. They were required to use a particular game, called CBP One, to make an appointment to enter the U. S. to get prison. In El Paso, there were about 150 meetings applicable a day. In a town of 1.5 million residents who were unable to accommodate the astounding number of new arrivals, the Pabóns were suddenly faced with many different irritable and tired immigrants.
A fire broke out on March 27, 2023, inside the city’s just immigration detention facility, setting the stage for the stress- cooker situation. In one of the most fatal immigration-related incidents in the country’s past, it killed 40 people and injured more than 20 others.
Five months later, the Pabón family made it possible to get a job through the CBP One app and enter the United States. They later applied for asylum, but a clear path for them remains enigmatic after joining an ever-growing immigrant population that is increasingly several and obvious and without family connections or acquaintances in the country.
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