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    Alan C. Moore
    Home » Blog » Seven out of 10 migrants staying put in Mexico

    Seven out of 10 migrants staying put in Mexico

    May 27, 2025Updated:May 27, 2025 Immigration No Comments
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    According to the OIM director, continued efforts are centered on assisting adults in finding employment and getting kids enrolled in schools.

    El Paso, Texas ( Border Report ) – Seven out of ten migrants who discovered the U.S. border was closed for asylum on January 20 did not go back to their countries or countries of origin but instead chose to remain in Mexico.

    These immigrants are now looking for secure employment for themselves and a Latino school that will enroll their children, including several families with young children.

    A Guatemalan deported to Mexico must now be returned to the US, according to a federal prosecutor.

    According to the International Organization for Migration ( IOM) director in Juarez, Mexico, that is true.

    ” We are seeing a lot of interest from people looking for ( lawful ) stays and integration to Mexico. According to Iliana Martell, head of the IOM company in Juarez,” a lot of people are looking for an education for their children, on having a proper work in Mexico.”

    Cuban exiles who have been deported for a long time are unnerved by Trump’s emigration assault.

    Martell did not disclose the number of city-wide workers. Numerous church-run house operators claim that the majority of their guests have left, and that the Center for Migrant Assistance in Juarez’s officials last week disclosed to local media that they are generally serving immigrants from the Mexican land.

    However, Mexico still has a sizable population of people from Latin American and Atlantic nations, according to IOM.

    Trump’s warning that somewhere is healthy for foreign students scurries out.

    According to Martell,” seventy-two percent of ( migrants ) interviewed by us in Mexico say they want to stay in Mexico but don’t want to go back to their countries of origin.”

    The main obstacles to a legal long-term remain in Mexico are income and the lack of paperwork needed to obtain a work force or enroll their children in school. Refugees need stable job.

    Father of 4 detained by ICE at citizen meeting after 12 years of residence in the US

    Judicial service fairs are being organized by the United Nations partner organization throughout Mexico, including one in Juarez over the weekend.

    IOM secured place in a building in the Juarez Pronaf region to allow El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemalan consulate staff as well as Brazilian and Haitian embassies representatives to speak with their citizens. After losing the classics during the lengthy border crossing or having them stolen by thieves, some people filled out forms to obtain a new card or national identification cards.

    Trump presidency releases individuals to shelters in which it threatened to sue for aiding migrants.

    Workers like William Gutierrez de la Cruz claim to have spent the last four weeks attempting to live day-to-day after arriving in Juarez on January 20 ( the time President Donald Trump became president ) and finding the frontier closed to asylum seekers.

    The San Miguel Pochuta, Guatemala local, claimed that because of lack of money, he’s sometimes had to go to sleep on the streets and wants a full-time career.

    Activists worry that migrants who are dropped off by Border Patrol are “being exploited”

    He claimed that the entry into the United States is unlawful because it affects person’s interests. We traveled north with the intention of traveling there, but President Trump’s position prevented that. So we’re trying to get permits and a passport to operate legally in Mexico, here in Juarez, with the consulates around.

    Gutierrez stated that he is not returning to Guatemala. His nation still experiences gang-related violence, low wages, and continual drought in small-scale farming.

    Browse the BorderReport.com pages for the newest unique stories and breaking information about issues along the U.S.-Mexico border.

    He also hopes that eventually the US government will grant him shelter, and that many people who like him will be able to enter the country via the border. In the interim, he said,” We are going to try to stay here and work honestly like all the Mexicans, working in factories or wherever they give us.”

    ProVideo in Juarez, Mexico, contributed to this article.

    Source credit

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