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New Migrant Shelter In Mexico Comes With Threats Of Family Separation

Asylum seekers at their encampment while they wait in Matamoros for their court hearings.
Reynaldo Leaños Jr. | Texas Public Radio
Asylum seekers at their encampment while they wait in Matamoros for their court hearings.

Officials in Matamoros, Mexico, are threatening to separate asylum seekers from their children if they don't leave a tent encampent of more than 1500 people near the Inernational Bridge that connects to Brownsville, Texas.

When plans were first announced to open a city-run shelter, asylum seekers and U.S. aid workers voiced concerns. If too far away from the International Bridge — where immigration hearings take place — asylum seekers could face transportation and safety issues. The new shelter is located at a gymnasium at Alberca Chavez, about a 30 minute walk from the bridge.

Cindy Candia is part of a nonprofit group called Angry Tias and Abuelas, which helps asylum seekers near ports of entry and bus stations.

“We won't let them go to a shelter. We can't let them,” Candia said. “We see what happens — and even 10 minutes in to Matamoros is dangerous for them. It’s just too dangerous.”

Matamoros is in the Mexican state of Tamaulipas, which the U.S. State Department has classified as a level 4 threat because of frequent kidnappings, extortion and murders.

An official with the Mexican Child Welfare Agency was videotaped Friday threatening to separate families in an attempt to force migrants out of the tent encampment and into the shelter.

A crowd of people tell him — in Spanish — they have been at encampment for four months, so why is he trying to help now?

The man reiterates that the law is on his side and gives him power. Someone in the crowd warns him not to say that children will be forcefully taken to the shelter. 

The man says the children need to be given care. If he wants, he said, could send the kids to a shelter in their home countries, but the shelter in Matamoros is better.

https://youtu.be/E_BrrQLdCE4

Karla Vargas is a senior attorney with the Texas Civil Rights Project. She said the group will monitor the Mexican government to see if it carries out the child separation.

“These policies that are being implemented at the local level unfortunately mirror the policies that are being implemented in the U.S.,” she said. “It seems like neither government is really willing or able to provide substantive support, even basic humanitarian support, to these individuals.” 

Vargas added the Trump administration’s zero tolerance policy of separating children from their families is something that is still going on.

There are more than 1,500 migrants waiting in Matamoros for their day in U.S. immigration court under the Trump administration's Remain in Mexico policy.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security, The Mexican National Institute of Migration and Matamoros Mayor Mario Lopez did not immediately respond to interview requests for this story. 

Dan Katz can be reached at and @dankatzradio on Twitter.

Bri Kirkham can be reached at and @BriKirk on Twitter.

Copyright 2020 Texas Public Radio. To see more, visit .

TPR's News Director Katz leads the organization’s news and journalism efforts, overseeing the newsroom’s day-to-day management and the development of a strategic vision for the news division. He also serves on the organization’s executive leadership team. TPR’s news team currently has 16 staff members, including reporters dedicated to in-depth coverage of subjects including Arts & Culture, Bioscience & Medicine, Education, Technology & Entrepreneurship, Military & Veterans Issues and State Government.
Reynaldo Leanos Jr. covers immigration and the U.S.-Mexico border for Texas Public Radio.
Bri Kirkham comes to San Antonio after living most of her life in southern Indiana. She graduated from Ball State University with degrees in journalism and telecommunications.