To understand what is happening at the border, we must understand that people are attempting to cross the border legally: it is the universal right of ALL people to seek asylum across borders.
Our immigration machine that controls border control AND the mexican immigration machine is forbidding all but a handful of asylum-seekers to cross the border 'legally'.
Literally ZERO to maybe 50 or at the most 80 people a day since the mass caravan arrived are being processed (which means being arrested and placed first in the 'ice box' a freezing cold cement floor and wire fenced cages with only one layer of clothing allowed - REALLY, fuckin REALLY????, then moved into a 'detention center' which is also a prison or deported).
The importance of being able to step onto u.s.ofa. soil is that once a refugee is on u.s.ofa. soil, she or he cannot be turned away but HAS to be processed (which might eventually mean being deported) but at least has the potential of providing the safety these human beings are seeking.
This leaves the thousands of refugees, stopped by border control from stepping onto u.s. soil, in limbo and truly struggling to survive (as opposed to those of us in this country struggling for our life-styles to survive).
THIS is how refugees seeking asylum were treated:
https://medium.com/@lagente2081/comunique-ii-e3a6fe5cc989?fbclid=IwAR1LQJK3ewoZSp7rlu7aoCwW_qJwXuz5iye_wCjpkBQ43M7xesa_8YJMGx8
The
week between Christmas and New Years is supposed to be a time of joy, a
time to spend with your family, a small break from capitalism and the
necessity of work-force education and work-force obligations. We from
Moringa, Maiz, y Nopal hope that you enjoyed it and were able to spend
time with the people you love.
For
us, it was a week of getting to develop a small understanding of the
current processes and encampments available for asylum seekers here in
Tijuana and across the border in San Diego. On the south side, there are
kitchens, there is food, clothes, tents, and blankets. Most basic needs
are covered except for a need for battery/solar lights, backpacks, and
self expression. There is no work available for asylum seekers, they
remain self reliant in many ways, but of course have no real or
consistent access to funding or the capitalistic system.
Today
is January 2nd; “list managers” help assist their relatives in making
it through the illegal numbering system “la lista” by calling out 0–10
numbers each day. Every number is representative of ten people; if you
are not there when your name is called, good luck, they say. The system
is managed by a composition notebook, and it is corrupted by a group
(the Mexican equivalent to ICE) called Grupos Betas. Numbers can, thanks
to their illegal infiltration and perpetuation of such a system as la
lista, be bought or sold. There are organizations on the ground working
to empower people throughout this illegal process and provide
information about “las hielerias” or ice boxes, the asylum seeking
process in general, and help available on the other side.
The
last number called January 2 was 1511, on New Years Day, 0 numbers were
called. The last number to be assigned was somewhere around 1900. That
means 3,890 people are still waiting to be called for their turn to
enter through the port of entry here in Tijuana.
On
the night of December 31st, we had used some fundraising to fill in a
gap of entertainment at one of the shelters here in town; we planned to
show a movie with a projector and small chargeable speaker, hoping it
would offer a momentary distraction from the reality of current
circumstances, but electricity currents were too low at the shelter to
power the DVD player and projector at the same time. We hope to return
again with a charged battery that we can plug those devices into.
Every
day here we drive home along the double walled, militarized border
zone, enforced by razor wire on the north side that reaches up to 7 feet
high.
*The only way to seek or request asylum in the US is to make it to the other side.*
Between
10 p.m. and 5 a.m., from December 31, 2018, and into January 1, 2019,
more than 100 asylum seekers including children gathered in an effort to
beat the illegal list and become capable of claiming asylum on what is
considered US soil.
On
our way home that night as we drove across that same highway we saw
people standing near a point on the border known as a spot for crossing.
We saw children wrapped in emergency blankets, and after rounding a
hill we saw plumes of tear gas with more people walking along the
highway. This was around 10 p.m.
We
went to get medical supplies and returned. We parked and went to see
what was happening. We joined up with those gathered there. We
communicated with the folx and they asked us to accompany them and
assist, since they had seen the tear gas and wanted us to provide
medical assistance (a couple of us are trained as street medics and
brought treatment for tear gas).
The
Central American folks seeking to cross and apply for asylum
collectively decided that even with the risk, it was their best and only
option. We want to stress that these folks were families, young men,
women and elderly folks- just like us, just like you- everyone simply
looking for a better life escaping the violence and poverty that made
them flee their home, literally walking and catching rides over
thousands of miles.
They
decided that the children and families would be prioritized to cross
over the fence and surrender themselves to border patrol and make a
claim for asylum.
The
hundred plus people present had to climb up a hill along the border
wall and reach a point safe to cross with no razor wire. As we crept
along the wall and were waiting for those at the point to cross, border
patrol with the help of two overhead drones assessed what was happening.
These
moments were tense and long. The minutes felt like hours. We had to be
as silent as possible; mothers and fathers worked to keep their children
quiet, la migra was just on the other side of the metal fence, we could
hear their engines, they could hear the rocks move beneath our feet. We
could all see the fear in all each other’s eyes, so many faces looked
down the hill with doubt.
Border
Patrol spotting the mass of us, without provocation or warning, they
launched at least three tear gas canisters over the fence. The first one
was maybe 2 yards in front of us. This forced all of us to flee into a
clearing/construction site. We were in the light and it became apparent
to border patrol how many of us there were. The people who ran from the
gas needed treatment. We got those most affected afar from the gas and
administered milk of magnesium. Another group stayed closer to the wall
but in sight of border patrol. More border patrol agents arrived. The
national guard arrived soon after.
The
large group of us fled uphill to escape the smoke, but after that
initial attack a dozen or more people returned to the wall determined to
keep trying. More people steadily followed suit. The smoke cleared and
people regathered to make their stand and demand the right to seek
asylum. At first a few, but with numbers the people shook the initial
shock off and regrouped at a hill point just up from the fence where no
razor wire was laid.
The point on the fence where folks crossed was prepared and people encouraged the families and each other not to be afraid. People called out to each other “No tengas miedo!” “Don’t be afraid!”
The
people yelled out to the soldiers and border patrol that they did not
want violence, only harmony and jobs, they wanted peace for the new
year. A few young men braved the flood lights and the leveled rifles
aimed at their chests and jumped the fence and surrendered peacefully to
Border Patrol. Families that had retreated from the gas came forward
and the children and parents went to the fence to cross and surrender
themselves. With hands raised, the national guardsmen aimed their rifles
on them. We saw red lasers being aimed at them and those of us on the
small hill behind the fence. As children were being lifted above the
fence, the guardsman assuming command ordered his subordinates to not
help the children. One guardsman closer to the fence was obviously
conflicted as he saw that the children needed assistance dropping
across. We heard one national guardsman repeatedly call out: “Do not help those children.”
Repeat that.
Do not help those children.
That is what homeland security means.
Do not help those children.
The
people called out asking why they had their guns out leveled on all of
us, leveled on unarmed children, why they tossed the gas, why they hated
them so much.
Families
and children made it across and this gave encouragement to the group
and more families and individuals started to come down the hill towards
the fence. Children were climbing to the point when the U.S launched a
tear gas canister directly at them. It was completely unprovoked.
Contrary to the Border patrol report the following day, there were no
rocks thrown to provoke such an attack. Over the course of the next few
minutes between 20 and 30 canisters were fired at all of us.
It
was incredibly chaotic, the amount of gas in the air was overpowering-
we all retreated helping each other, administering milk of magnesium to
disinfect the tear gas, and make sure the families were together. What
was terrifying was that where the families that had come down the hill,
into basically a large ditch were completely drowned in gas and smoke. A
mother who had sent her children down was crying out for them. She
fainted, people were running blinded by the smoke, gagging and
screaming- there was massive confusion not knowing whether or not the
children had made it over without their parents, which would be
horrible. We know what has been happening to children separated from
their parents.
The
children were found; a young Honduran man had gotten them out of the
smoke. He was shot in the back with a canister as he was carrying them
to safety. Those moments not knowing if the children had been separated,
hearing the mother scream out for her two children- only toddlers, as
tear gas stung though the air and the blades of a massive drone flew
overhead with a blinding spotlight flashing over us all, is how the “New
Year” greeted those seeking a better life. We all regrouped away from
the smoke. People were dazed and in shock from the gas and the
explosions of the canisters.
It
needs to be stressed that the narrative that the Department of Homeland
Security has issued via their official report IS FALSE, as with any
media reports that describe a situation in which Border Patrol and
National Guard were defending themselves against aggressors. This
narrative must be stopped, it is a normalization and escalation of
violence. The canisters that were launched were knowingly
fired at unarmed families and children. We have video that directly
contradicts this false narrative. If unchecked these men will
undoubtedly escalate violence causing maiming and death.
As
folks regrouped and recovered along the highway, a group of folks broke
off to head to another point. We don’t know what happened to them. The
majority stayed along the highway.
People
were determined to make it across. Despite what occurred no one was
ready to give up. But it was apparent that it was not going to happen,
at least not here, not now.
We
gave out what supplies we had, which was not much but all we had. We
organized rides back to the shelters prioritizing the children and
families that were still present.
It was 5 a.m. Still people had to walk what is usually a 40 min drive through the highways of Tijuana.
We
began the New Years with ojos blancos, white eyes. The milk of
magnesium, the disinfectant for tear gas leaves a white residue along
your eyes. Our compañerxs, looked north to the U.S and instead of the
land of the opportunity, the supposed “land of the free and home of the
brave” they saw men with rifles leveled on their children, they felt the
burning gas and smoke of hate.
We
don’t know what the repercussions from that night will be, or where we
go from here. What we do know is that this type of violence is
unacceptable on any and every level. The United States must be held
accountable and we must challenge the false narrative that portrays
asylum seekers as combative invaders. We know the truth of what happened
that night and we hope you share that truth widely so that these voices
may be lifted up and heard by all of our hearts
The
violence does not end once you get across the border either. We hear
stories about the hieleras, we know that families and babies are being
dropped off in the middle of empty concrete parking lots, dropped off at
bus stations; escaping days or weeks in cold detention only to find
themselves detained in another way, still struggling, still without a
warm or safe place to rest their heads.
We
were lucky to meet a woman who is helping tremendously on the other
side, the north side of that long and violent wall. This week we ask you
to direct any support to her, and the work that she is doing to help
secure safe places to sleep, warm clothes, toys for children, and
hygiene items for families and individuals.
A link to her GoFundMe: Bridge of Love Across Borders.
Thank
you for reading and continuing to follow us. Please continue to discuss
this with your friends, family and community. We have to be brave in
discussing these things and not shy away from the discomfort of these
tragic truths.
As always, feel free to email us at elcampocaballo@protonmail.com.
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