In a letter dated June 30, 105
organizations wrote to President Joe Biden demanding an end to the
expulsions of refugees under Title 42 of the United States Code. Title
42 expulsions are removals by the U.S. government of persons who have
recently been in a country where a communicable disease was present.
They were implemented in the name of COVID-19. The letter explains the plight of the refugees today and the state of human
rights violations at the hands of the U.S. administration. The text of
the letter
follows.
Dear President Biden:
We, the 105 undersigned organizations, write to express our alarm
and disappointment that your administration is reportedly considering
plans to continue to use the unlawful Title 42
expulsion policy to block and expel adult asylum seekers for at least
two more months and may use punitive measures such as ankle monitors
and expedited removal in processing families.
Not only does the Title 42 policy violate U.S. refugee law and
treaties, but it also endangers people seeking U.S. protection, with
over 3,250 kidnappings, rapes, and other attacks on people
expelled or blocked at the U.S.-Mexico border since you took office.
This number rises every day your administration fails to end this
policy. We urge your administration to fully rescind
this policy for all populations, comply with U.S. refugee law, and
ensure that Black, LGBTQ and other adult asylum seekers, many of whom
have been turned back or expelled at ports of
entry, as well as families and children, have swift access to the U.S.
asylum system.
Many of our organizations have repeatedly called on your
administration to end the Title 42 expulsion policy and restart asylum
processing for people seeking refuge. Rational,
science-based measures, recommended by public health experts exist to
mitigate COVID-19 concerns and safely process asylum seekers at the
border. The use of Title 42 -- described as a
"Stephen Miller special" by a former Trump administration official --
was implemented over the objections of senior Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) experts and has been
widely discredited by epidemiologists and public health experts who
have confirmed it has "no scientific basis as a public health measure."
These experts provided detailed recommendations
for the safe processing of asylum seekers to your transition team, the
CDC, and other officials in your administration. In May 2021, medical
experts for the Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) filed a whistleblower disclosure condemning the policy
for lacking a public health justification and for fueling widespread
family separation and detention of children.
Medical professionals providing care in encampments and shelters in
Tijuana have also decried the expulsion policy as threatening the
health and safety of migrants.
Human rights organizations and the media have documented the
escalating dangers faced by asylum seekers and migrants subjected to
the Title 42 policy, many of whom have been
forced into squalid and dangerous conditions in several new camps near
the border. Legal and humanitarian staff who work with migrants
subjected to the policy have also faced serious
risks to their safety. The Title 42 policy has also driven family
separations as it presents families with the impossible choice of
keeping children in danger or sending them alone across the
border for their safety. As a result, many of the single adults who are
now stuck in Mexico are desperately trying to reunite with their
children in Office of Refugee Resettlement custody or
with family in the United States.
The expulsion policy has disproportionately affected asylum seekers
from Africa, the Caribbean, and elsewhere, who were not placed in the
Migrant Protection Protocols and are
not eligible for processing into the United States under Phase 1 or
Phase 2 of its wind-down. Black and LGBTQ asylum seekers blocked in
Mexico under the expulsion policy and unable to
request protection at a port of entry continue to experience targeted
discrimination and violence. Recent reports indicate that while your
administration may end the policy in July for
families, it may continue to subject adult asylum seekers to the policy
for at least two months -- an unacceptable delay that would prolong
disparities in access to protection and
disproportionately impact Black asylum seekers from African and
Caribbean countries, as well as LGBTQ refugees and others who are not
travelling with children. Such an approach would
be completely indefensible. Public health safeguards in no way require
or justify disparate treatment between families and adults arriving
alone. Moreover, such an approach is contrary to
U.S. asylum law and the non-discrimination provisions of the Refugee
Convention.
We are concerned that this administration continues to look to
deterrence as a strategy to address processing of asylum seekers at the
border. Ankle monitors, budget requests for
expansive detention, and expedited removal are part of a deterrence
strategy that is inhumane and ineffective. Such a cruel strategy is the
physical manifestation of the statement "Don't
come." Electronic monitoring devices are a particularly intrusive
measure that causes physical and emotional harm without a positive
impact on appearance rates as compared to appropriate,
community-based case management services. With respect to expedited
removal, many of our organizations, as well as the bipartisan U.S.
Commission on International Religious Freedom,
have long noted failures by Customs and Border Protection officers and
Border Patrol agents to follow basic required procedures to identify
individuals who must be referred for credible
fear interviews, as well as intimidation and coercion of asylum seekers
to withdraw requests for protection.
While we greatly appreciate your administration's ongoing efforts to
process into safety certain asylum seekers subjected to Migrant protection Protocols, we remain
gravely concerned that the Biden
administration continues to block and expel asylum seekers to the same
dangers under the Title 42 policy. In a rare public statement calling
on this country to uphold its legal obligations,
the UN High Commissioner for Refugees recently urged the United
States to swiftly end this policy and "restore access to asylum for the
people whose lives depend on it, in line with
international legal and human rights obligations."
With the 70th anniversary of the Refugee Convention approaching in
July, we urge your administration to end its misuse of Title 42 public
health authority immediately, restore asylum
processing in line with U.S. refugee laws and treaties for all asylum
seekers -- including at U.S. ports of entry -- and set an example for
the rest of the world by welcoming refugees with
dignity.
Respectfully,
[Signed]
For list of signatories, click here.
This article was published in
Volume 51 Number 18 - July 4, 2021
Article Link:
https://cpcml.ca/Tmlm2021/Articles/MS51183.HTM
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: editor@cpcml.ca