- Tijuana
Health Authorities Confirm Thousands Of Caravan
Members Are Crawling With Deadly Disease - AIDS, Tuberculosis,
Chagas, Hepatitis And Many Other Infections - They Are Not
Coming Here For ‘Jobs’ They Are After Free Medical Care
Members Are Crawling With Deadly Disease - AIDS, Tuberculosis,
Chagas, Hepatitis And Many Other Infections - They Are Not
Coming Here For ‘Jobs’ They Are After Free Medical Care
MIGRANT
CARAVAN MEMBERS HAVE BREACHED THE U.S. BORDER FENCE IN DESPERATE BID
TO CLAIM ASYLUM
4
December,2018
Faced
with weeks, if not months, of waiting at the U.S.-Mexico border,
frustrated Central American asylum seekers reportedly breached the
border fence in a desperate bid to claim asylum in the U.S.
On
Monday, a number of the asylum seekers who had been waiting in the
Mexican border town of Tijuana to make their asylum claims climbed
over the border fence, despite being almost certain to face detention
by U.S. authorities on the other side, Reuters reported.
While
the migrants are well aware of the risks of entering the U.S. outside
designated ports of entry, they took the chance that entering
illegally would at least give them a chance to make their claims for
asylum.
Photos
show groups of asylum seekers climbing over fencing put up at the
border in Tijuana. Some photos show small children being hoisted by
adults and carried over the border fence, with many telling Getty
photographers that they planned to request political asylum in the
U.S. once they reached U.S. Soil.
It
is unclear how many people tried to cross into the U.S. on
Monday.
Asylum
seekers have faced weeks of waiting in Tijuana as U.S. immigration
officers at the nearest port of entry, San Ysidro, in San Diego,
California, continue to process no more than 100 asylum each
day.
It
is unclear how long they will be forced to wait. Tijuana's government
has said the asylum seekers could be there for months before they get
their chance to submit their claims to U.S. authorities.
If
the Trump administration's recently proposed asylum policy barring
anyone caught entering the U.S. outside legal ports of entry from
being eligible for asylum was not tied up in court, asylum seekers
caught crossing the border would likely face immediate removal
orders.
The Trump administration
issued the policy on November 8, however, San
Francisco Federal Judge Jon Tigar temporarily blocked it shortly
afterward, stating that Congress had mandated that all
immigrants should be eligible to apply for asylum in the U.S.,
regardless of how they arrived in the country.
Members
of the "migrant caravan" climb over the U.S.-Mexico border
fence on December 3 in Tijuana, Mexico. Many making the crossing had
planned to request political asylum in the United States after
traveling more than six weeks from Central America.MARIO TAMA/GETTY
President
Donald Trump has since proposed that asylum seekers should be forced
to wait in Mexico while their claims are processed in the U.S.
That
proposal is likely to face challenges, however, with advocates
saying that it would endanger the lives of refugees and deny them due
process.
Central
American asylum seekers have expressed frustration over the
conditions and treatment they have faced in Tijuana and at the
U.S.-Mexico border, where U.S. Border Patrol agents fired tear gas at
asylum seekers, including families with small children, last month.
A
Tijuana shelter housing as many as 6,000 of the asylum seekers
in a sports arena was recently shut down because of "poor
sanitary conditions," according to the local government.
The
closure came after advocates sounded the alarm about asylum seekers
becoming sick with respiratory problems and chicken pox while living
in the temporary shelter, where they were living in wet and muddy
conditions brought on by heavy rains.
Many
asylum seekers have been moved to a new facility, which is farther
away from the U.S.-Mexico border.
The
new facility, set up at a former concert venue, is roughly 10 miles
away from the border and will be run by federal authorities.
More
undocumented immigrants in California would get health care under
Democrats’ plan
3
December, 2018
Influential
Democratic state lawmakers are re-introducing bills Monday to give
immigrants without legal status access to Medi-Cal, California’s
health care program for low-income people.
Outgoing
Sen. Ricardo Lara, incoming Sen. Maria Elena Durazo and Assemblyman
Joaquin Arambula are introducing identical bills in each house, a
frequent tactic for significant legislation.
The
bills would allow all adults, regardless of immigration status, to be
eligible for Medi-Cal.
Lara,
who was elected state insurance commissioner and will leave the
Senate next month, and Arambula proposed similar bills last session
that didn’t pass.
Children
without legal status are already eligible for Medi-Cal benefits under
a 2016 law, which has expanded coverage to more than 200,000
children. People over 19 who don’t have legal authorization to live
in the United States have access to some limited Medi-Cal benefits
including pregnancy and emergency care.
The
effort last session to expand full Medi-Cal benefits to immigrants
living in the country illegally didn’t make it into the final
budget.
“It’s
something that is urgently needed across immigrant communities in
California,” said Carolina Gamero, a spokeswoman for the California
Immigrant Policy Center, which is supporting the bills. “The longer
that we wait and the longer we keep up this unjust exclusion, it’s
really setting back California.”
Although
they were disappointed outgoing Gov. Jerry Brown didn’t prioritize
the issue in budget negotiations last session, advocates are hopeful
incoming Gov. Gavin Newsom will embrace the proposal, Gamero said.
Newsom
campaigned on expanding access to health care. Most uninsured people
in California are not eligible for coverage because of their
immigration status.
“You
cannot talk about universal health care in California unless you talk
about health care for the undocumented,” said Rachel Linn Gish,
spokeswoman for consumer group Health Access California.
Analyses
of previous versions of the proposal found it could expand coverage
to an estimated 1.2 million adults without legal status who meet the
income requirements to enroll in Medi-Cal.
The
Legislative Analyst’s Office estimated last session that the plan
would cost roughly $3 billion per year. Federal limitations on
undocumented immigrants accessing publicly funded health care would
force the state to shoulder the full cost, a high price tag that has
prevented past proposals from advancing.
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