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https://havanatimes.org/?p=144944
The List All Caravan Asylum Seekers Want to Be On
 December 3, 2018 <https://havanatimes.org/?p=144944>
By Ken Alexander*


HAVANA TIMES – Within the coming days, a total of 8,000 Central American asylum 
seekers are expected to have reached the Mexican side of the border with the 
USA, in Tijuana. Over 6,000 have already arrived.

On the other side of the border, over 5,000 US Troops – around 2 for every 3 
migrants – have been deployed with the latest high-tech gear. The Border Patrol 
also has high powered rifles, powerful vehicles and night vision.   

For Mexican and US citizens who drive across the border into the US your car is 
x-rayed, your documents photographed, and everything analyzed by computers 
before you even reach the guard station 50 yards head.   And, cameras and 
ground sensors line the U.S. side of the border relaying information instantly 
to command centers.

Who keeps the list?

However, the process of managing who will be able to request asylum, and when, 
is all done in a very neatly organized notebook where each name is hand 
written. The names are grouped by tens and assigned a number. That number is 
then written on a very small piece of paper and given to each person in that 
group. It is the key to the highway and it is low-tech all the way.

US Immigration does not manage the list. And the Mexican border patrol does not 
manage it either. It is managed by a small group of migrants and kept safe by 
the Mexican authorities at night. There is just this one hand written copy of 
the book.  


Immigration asks the keepers of the list who is next to be processed.  It is a 
very democratic process. The group of migrants who manage the list was elected 
in a manner so that they would represent each of the countries from which the 
migrants had come; El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala and Nicaragua.  

The process works the same at the border in Nogales, MX, about eight hours east 
of Tijuana. Volunteer groups manage who is on the list and make sure that the 
migrants get to US Immigration when their number comes up.  In Tijuana, it is 
much more complicated because of the enormous number of people.  Communication 
is very difficult in the camps here in Tijuana.

Many of the migrants that I interviewed over the past two weeks did not know 
about the list and about the need to get a number. They arrived and received a 
wrist band with a number on it.  It all seemed official. No one told them there 
was another step; a critical one.  Simply arriving at the camp was not going to 
get you an asylum interview.

It was heartbreaking to inform many of migrants who had been camped out in 
Tijuana for weeks that they still needed to get a number.  It was difficult to 
learn that while they had settled into the increasingly squalid conditions of 
the Benito Juarez sports facility, hundreds and thousands of arriving migrants 
did get on the list ahead of them.

In order to get on the list you have to walk 30 minutes or so to the Chaparral 
border crossing; the scene of the border rush last week.  Under a tent, on a 
folding table sits the notebook.   Your name gets written in it along with your 
country of origin, and you get your number.

The difficult part is that you have to be back at this border crossing at 6:30 
am the morning that your number is called. And that may be months from now. 
With thousands of people on the list, and the U.S. processing no more than 100 
people per day, it is very difficult to know when to come to the border. And if 
you miss your day, you have only 24 hours in which to come back and explain.

After that your name goes to the bottom of the list.

Now that the migrants are moving to a new facility 15 miles away from the 
Juarez Benito camp, the effort to get to the Chaparral border crossing to 
register, or to listen for your number to be called, will be arduous.  It is a 
waiting game, and a confusing one at that.

*Ken Alexander is a freelance photographer and journalist from Woods Hole, MA, 
USA. He can be reached at k...@mediaoutreach.org.
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