A HEALTH rule imposed at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, which has blocked most asylum seekers at the US border with Mexico, must stay in place, a judge ruled yesterday.
Title 42, the colloquial name for an order that can effectively prevent anyone without a visa from entering the United States, even to claim asylum, was due to expire on Monday.
President Joe Biden’s administration said the rule was no longer needed, more than two years after it was imposed by then-president Donald Trump.
But Republican governors of more than 20 states went to court to demand that it remain in place, arguing relaxing it could create an influx of migrants.
Yesterday, federal judge Robert Summerhays issued an injunction to that effect.
“The court finds that the plaintiff states have satisfied each of the requirements for a preliminary injunction,” said the ruling, signed by Summerhays.
For migration reform campaigners, Title 42 has been a failure: an immigration policy dressed up as a health policy – and not fit for either purpose.
The rule allows for the immediate, without-cause removal of any foreigner or non-resident trying to enter the country without a visa.
There is no legal process, nor any formal deportation to country of origin, and a border agent can apply a Title 42 expulsion without the lengthy interview process usually required.
Campaigners seized on yesterday’s ruling as further proof that the immigration system in the United States is broken.
“Today’s unfortunate decision says that the government can suspend asylum with no notice at all, but can’t restore normal immigration law without going through a lengthy and complicated process,” Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, senior policy adviser for the American Council on Migration, told AFP.
“This nonsensical decision will lead to continued harm for asylum seekers and will continue to create chaos at the border.”
More than 1.8 million expulsions have been carried out under Title 42.
With no legal penalty for anyone expelled under the rule, many who are deported return to try again, often in ever-more dangerous circumstances.
Campaigners point to the rocketing death toll for would-be migrants – 557 people died at the border last year, the deadliest year since records began in 1998.
“The most difficult part is knowing that more migrants will be without protection and will be put in situations of high danger,” said Pedro Rios of the American Friends Service Committee. – AFP, May 21, 2022.
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