WATCH LIVE
begin quote from:
https://www.cnn.com/2021/03/24/us/border-climate-change-covid/index.html
Two big factors are making things worse at the border. But they're not getting much attention

By Catherine E. Shoichet, CNN
Updated 8:55 AM ET, Wed March 24, 2021

A woman looks at the destruction Hurricane Iota left behind in Nicaragua in November. Months later, Central America is still struggling to recover from two devastating hurricanes -- and some migrants reaching the US-Mexico border say the storms played a role in their decisions to head north.
(CNN)The devastating storms struck more than 1,000 miles away from the US-Mexico border, wiping out homes, crops and jobs.
Now, months later, some migrants hoping to start over in the United States say the hurricanes are a big reason behind their decision to head north.
"The house fell down all around us. Thank God my mom survived," a teenager from Guatemala tearfully told CNN as he took his first steps in the United States.
"You always dream about living in a house with your children. Now we have nothing," a Honduran mother said from a bus station in Brownsville, Texas, after crossing the border with her 6-year-old daughter.
Content by WOW Skin Science
Spring clean your beauty routine, naturally
Put your beauty routine through a spring cleaning with WOW Skin Science
"(Hurricane) Eta -- plus the pandemic -- left us with nothing," a Honduran father told CNN en Español shortly after US authorities deported him and his family to Reynosa, Mexico.
These voices from the border are a reminder of two important contributors to this crisis that haven't gotten much attention, even as political debate heats up: climate change and Covid-19.
Powerful, back-to-back hurricanes in November exacted a heavy toll on a region already suffering from the economic devastation of the pandemic.
That's making the situation unfolding now at the US-Mexico border even more complicated. Here's how:
Two intense hurricanes displaced hundreds of thousands of people. Now some of them are migrating
It's a possibility political leaders in Central America and experts on climate migration began warning of as soon as Hurricane Eta and Hurricane Iota struck. Months ago, a Honduran doctor who spoke with CNN said there wasn't any doubt the storms were going to spur more migration.
"So much famine is coming because the last harvest was lost. There is no capacity to store anything. Prices were already skyrocketing. ... I don't want to think about what's going on through the minds of those who lost everything," nutrition specialist Dr. Maria Angélica Milla said in November. "Prepare for the waves."
Climate change itself is rarely the lone driving factor behind migration, says Kayly Ober, program manager of Refugees International's Climate Displacement Program. But in exacerbating existing issues, it can play into people's decisions.
"In the case of Hurricanes Eta and Iota, yes, the pure intensity of the scale and impact was definitely impacted by climate change," she says. "That wrought a level of destruction that was unheard of in some parts of the region."
Flooding wiped entire communities off the map in Nicaragua, Honduras and Guatemala. Homes were destroyed. Millions of people were affected, and hundreds of thousands were displaced.
Phil Klotzbach, a hurricane researcher at Colorado State University who monitors and analyzes hurricane trends around the globe, told CNN last year that the fact that water temperatures were warm enough to allow both storms to rapidly intensify so late in the hurricane season was a clear signal of global warming.
Many migrants who've spoken with CNN over the past month have said the storms played a part in their decisions to flee. They've also mentioned other factors, like the hope that a new US presidential administration would be more welcoming.
Families in the region were already "surviving on the edge of a knife" even before the storms, facing food shortages and pervasive violence, says Meghan López, the International Rescue Committee's regional vice president for Latin America.
"The hurricanes were...the last in the series of what was a devastating year," she says, noting that the storms were one part of a complicated mix of factors fueling migration.
"To have the pandemic on top of that, to have aid to the region cut, all of these things create this pressure cooker where there's no escape valve," López says. "And the only escape valve is to try to flee the terrible situation people are living in. ... People are making desperate decisions."
The pandemic had already deepened problems in Central America
López says the pandemic, like the hurricanes that hit the region, made existing problems far worse.
"If people were already experiencing violence, they were then locked into their communities, locked into their homes with that violence," she says. "Really Covid just exacerbated at ratcheted every single issue that people are facing in the region, and every single risk factor for migration in the region, up many, many notches."
Another reason why, Ober says, is that coping strategies subsistence farmers would use to get through economic hardship were no longer an option once the pandemic hit. For example, during prolonged and repeated droughts in the region known as "the dry corridor," it's common for farmers to temporarily move into cities for a season if their crops are struggling.

An elderly woman sits outside a tent in Lima, Honduras, where she lives after losing her home in last year's hurricanes Eta and Iota. Devastation from the storms and the economic damage of the Covid-19 pandemic have added to the forces that drive Hondurans to migrate.
"With Covid-19, it was a double whammy," Ober says. "If you moved to the city, there were lockdowns, and you weren't able to access those economic opportunities anymore. It made it harder to overcome any kind of shocks."
The pandemic pushed 22 million more people into poverty in Latin America last year, according to the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. That's on top of the public health consequences, which have also been devastating.
It's also made logistics at the border more difficult
In addition to worsening economic conditions in Central America, the pandemic has also contributed to a big backlog at the US-Mexico border.
"It's playing a huge role," says Sarah Pierce, a policy analyst at the Migration Policy Institute.
A growing number of unaccompanied minors are being held in facilities longer than the 72-hour legal limit because shelters run by the Department of Health and Human Services haven't had enough space due to pandemic constraints on how many people they could house.
"The administration had limited HHS' capabilities to shelter unaccompanied child migrants. They had decreased their bed space by 40%. Thousands of beds that normally would be available were offline," Pierce says. Even though those capacity rules were recently lifted and the shelters have been ramping up to hold more people, she says, the process has been slow.

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Maria, a 4-year-old from El Salvador, is held by her mother, Loudi, after they crossed the Rio Grande on March 5.
Hide Caption
11 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
A child looks out from a tent in Tijuana, Mexico, on February 27. He's camped next to other migrants from Central America who are hoping to cross the border and request asylum in the United States.
Hide Caption
12 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrants from the Matamoros camp in Mexico arrive to cross the border bridge into the United States on Febuary 26. The camp recently emptied out after the Biden administration ended the Trump administration's Migrant Protection Protocols, which forced many to wait in Mexico while their immigration cases made their way through US courts.
Hide Caption
13 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
A US Border Patrol agent delivers a young asylum seeker and his family to a bus station in Brownsville, Texas, on February 26. US immigration authorities are now releasing many asylum-seeking families after detaining them while crossing the US-Mexico border. The immigrant families are free to travel throughout the US while awaiting asylum hearings.
Hide Caption
14 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
A US Customs and Border Protection officer checks for the name of a migrant as a group of at least 25 asylum seekers were allowed to travel from a migrant camp in Mexico into the United States on February 25. The group was the first allowed to cross into south Texas as part of the unwinding of the Trump administration's Migrant Protection Protocols. Many of the asylum seekers had been waiting in a squalid camp alongside the Rio Grande for more than a year.
Hide Caption
15 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Emma Moreno, right, a volunteer working at the Agape shelter in Tijuana, helps an asylum seeker check the "Conecta" website of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. "Conecta" allows asylum seekers who've been stuck in Mexico under the Migrant Protection Protocols to enter the United States and wait there for their asylum process. On the first day of the rollout, the website quickly became oversaturated as the estimated 25,000 people in the program attempted to register.
Hide Caption
16 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
A migrant girl from Brazil who's seeking asylum in the United States sits on a bench inside a shelter in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on February 19.
Hide Caption
17 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Asylum seekers wait outside the El Chaparral border crossing port as they wait to cross into the United States from Tijuana on February 19. The Biden administration is still turning back most migrants at the border, but officials are gradually allowing 25,000 people previously enrolled in the Migrant Protection Protocols program to cross into the United States.
Hide Caption
18 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrants seeking asylum in the United States carry empty water jugs at a camp in Matamoros, Mexico, on February 18.
Hide Caption
19 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrants cross the Rio Bravo to get to El Paso, Texas, from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on February 5.
Hide Caption
20 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Teddy bears belonging to migrant girls are seen in the Rio Bravo on February 5 after the girls requested asylum in El Paso.
Hide Caption
21 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrant children from Central America sit in the back of a US Border Patrol vehicle as they wait to be transported on March 14. They had just crossed the Rio Grande on a raft, traveling from Mexico into Penitas, Texas. Pictured in the front row are Yoandri, 4; Michael, 5; and Yojanlee, 2, all from Honduras.
Hide Caption
1 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
This aerial photo, taken on March 15, shows a temporary processing center set up by US Customs and Border Protection in Donna, Texas. Lawyers who recently spoke with children at the facility say they're terrified, crying and worried about not being able to call their parents.
Hide Caption
2 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Yaretsi, a 4-year-old from Honduras, sits on the lap of her mother, Angie, while looking out the window of a US Border Patrol vehicle on March 15. They had just crossed the Rio Grande on a raft.
Hide Caption
3 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrant mothers from Central America hold their children as they await transport after crossing from Mexico into La Joya, Texas, on March 14.
Hide Caption
4 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrant families and unaccompanied minors from Central America take refuge in a makeshift processing center under the Anzalduas International Bridge in Granjeno, Texas, on March 12.
Hide Caption
5 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrants from Central America await transport in Penitas, Texas, on March 12.
Hide Caption
6 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Unaccompanied minors are transported in a US Border Patrol vehicle after they crossed the Rio Grande into the United States. Officials say the number of unaccompanied minors in the agency's custody has reached a record high.
Hide Caption
7 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Smugglers use a raft to transport migrant families and children across the Rio Grande into Texas on March 6.
Hide Caption
8 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrant families and children sit in the back of a police truck after they crossed the Rio Grande on March 5.
Hide Caption
9 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrants climb the banks of the Rio Grande into the United States as smugglers on rafts prepare to return to Mexico on March 5.
Hide Caption
10 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Maria, a 4-year-old from El Salvador, is held by her mother, Loudi, after they crossed the Rio Grande on March 5.
Hide Caption
11 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
A child looks out from a tent in Tijuana, Mexico, on February 27. He's camped next to other migrants from Central America who are hoping to cross the border and request asylum in the United States.
Hide Caption
12 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrants from the Matamoros camp in Mexico arrive to cross the border bridge into the United States on Febuary 26. The camp recently emptied out after the Biden administration ended the Trump administration's Migrant Protection Protocols, which forced many to wait in Mexico while their immigration cases made their way through US courts.
Hide Caption
13 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
A US Border Patrol agent delivers a young asylum seeker and his family to a bus station in Brownsville, Texas, on February 26. US immigration authorities are now releasing many asylum-seeking families after detaining them while crossing the US-Mexico border. The immigrant families are free to travel throughout the US while awaiting asylum hearings.
Hide Caption
14 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
A US Customs and Border Protection officer checks for the name of a migrant as a group of at least 25 asylum seekers were allowed to travel from a migrant camp in Mexico into the United States on February 25. The group was the first allowed to cross into south Texas as part of the unwinding of the Trump administration's Migrant Protection Protocols. Many of the asylum seekers had been waiting in a squalid camp alongside the Rio Grande for more than a year.
Hide Caption
15 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Emma Moreno, right, a volunteer working at the Agape shelter in Tijuana, helps an asylum seeker check the "Conecta" website of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. "Conecta" allows asylum seekers who've been stuck in Mexico under the Migrant Protection Protocols to enter the United States and wait there for their asylum process. On the first day of the rollout, the website quickly became oversaturated as the estimated 25,000 people in the program attempted to register.
Hide Caption
16 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
A migrant girl from Brazil who's seeking asylum in the United States sits on a bench inside a shelter in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on February 19.
Hide Caption
17 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Asylum seekers wait outside the El Chaparral border crossing port as they wait to cross into the United States from Tijuana on February 19. The Biden administration is still turning back most migrants at the border, but officials are gradually allowing 25,000 people previously enrolled in the Migrant Protection Protocols program to cross into the United States.
Hide Caption
18 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrants seeking asylum in the United States carry empty water jugs at a camp in Matamoros, Mexico, on February 18.
Hide Caption
19 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrants cross the Rio Bravo to get to El Paso, Texas, from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on February 5.
Hide Caption
20 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Teddy bears belonging to migrant girls are seen in the Rio Bravo on February 5 after the girls requested asylum in El Paso.
Hide Caption
21 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrant children from Central America sit in the back of a US Border Patrol vehicle as they wait to be transported on March 14. They had just crossed the Rio Grande on a raft, traveling from Mexico into Penitas, Texas. Pictured in the front row are Yoandri, 4; Michael, 5; and Yojanlee, 2, all from Honduras.
Hide Caption
1 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
This aerial photo, taken on March 15, shows a temporary processing center set up by US Customs and Border Protection in Donna, Texas. Lawyers who recently spoke with children at the facility say they're terrified, crying and worried about not being able to call their parents.
Hide Caption
2 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Yaretsi, a 4-year-old from Honduras, sits on the lap of her mother, Angie, while looking out the window of a US Border Patrol vehicle on March 15. They had just crossed the Rio Grande on a raft.
Hide Caption
3 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrant mothers from Central America hold their children as they await transport after crossing from Mexico into La Joya, Texas, on March 14.
Hide Caption
4 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrant families and unaccompanied minors from Central America take refuge in a makeshift processing center under the Anzalduas International Bridge in Granjeno, Texas, on March 12.
Hide Caption
5 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrants from Central America await transport in Penitas, Texas, on March 12.
Hide Caption
6 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Unaccompanied minors are transported in a US Border Patrol vehicle after they crossed the Rio Grande into the United States. Officials say the number of unaccompanied minors in the agency's custody has reached a record high.
Hide Caption
7 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Smugglers use a raft to transport migrant families and children across the Rio Grande into Texas on March 6.
Hide Caption
8 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrant families and children sit in the back of a police truck after they crossed the Rio Grande on March 5.
Hide Caption
9 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Migrants climb the banks of the Rio Grande into the United States as smugglers on rafts prepare to return to Mexico on March 5.
Hide Caption
10 of 21

Photos: This is what we're seeing at the border
Maria, a 4-year-old from El Salvador, is held by her mother, Loudi, after they crossed the Rio Grande on March 5.
Hide Caption
11 of 21





















Another major complicating factor: the pandemic is ongoing -- raising public health questions about the conditions in facilities where migrants are detained and how coronavirus testing is being conducted.
"There hasn't been a lot of transparency about the testing process. ... It's adding a layer of complexity to an already very challenging situation," Pierce says.
And the government hasn't given the media access to the Customs and Border Protection facilities where many migrants are being held, so there's still a lot we don't know about what's happening behind closed doors.
CNN's Rosa Flores, Gustavo Valdés, Natalie Gallón, Priscilla Alvarez, Geneva Sands and Ashley Killough contributed to this report.
No comments:
Post a Comment