Asylum Denied

Only a fraction of Mexicans get U.S. asylum.

As evening falls on southern Mexico, Sarah (not her real name) is shopping at a fruit market a block from her house. It is Friday, and her father, an investigator for the State Judicial Police, is home relaxing on his night off. Wearing blue jeans and an unbuttoned shirt, he is sweeping his front porch, waiting for his daughter to return and make dinner.

Eduardo Beckett, attorney for the El Paso nonprofit Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center is leading the legal battle to help innocent Mexicans caught up in the drug violence gain asylum and protection in the United States.
Diane Sierra
Eduardo Beckett, attorney for the El Paso nonprofit Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center is leading the legal battle to help innocent Mexicans caught up in the drug violence gain asylum and protection in the United States.
Mexican nationals running for their lives flee the violence in their hometowns and make for the border, where many turn themselves in to U.S. officials and ask for asylum.
Diane Sierra
Mexican nationals running for their lives flee the violence in their hometowns and make for the border, where many turn themselves in to U.S. officials and ask for asylum.

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Sarah pays for the food just as a rush of black SUVs with no license plates speed past her along the road. She recognizes them instantly as they pull up to her home in a cloud of dust. Men in dark masks with AK-47s jump out and run toward Sarah's front door. Two of them are wearing police patches. One of them is her father's commander.

"They're taking your dad! They're taking your dad!" shouts a little girl in the store. Sarah tries to run, but her legs won't churn fast enough. Everything is in slow motion. She watches the gunmen drag her father out onto the street while he screams, "Show me the arrest warrant! Don't take me!" Sarah sees the men punch her mother and shoot her father in the leg before hauling him into a truck and driving away.

By the time Sarah gets home, all that is left of her father is the blood-stained pavement. He has not been seen since.

For Sarah and her family, years of intimidation and abuse by corrupt police officers have come to a head. Her father, a member of the anti-kidnapping unit, had discovered that his commander had taken a young girl hostage and that he and other cops were working for the cartels.

Sarah's father tried to bring his commander to justice, denouncing him to Mexico's National Human Rights Commission, but there were no arrests, and it just made him a target. Crooked policemen and cartel thugs had threatened to kill him, beaten Sarah and raped his wife, but he refused to work for drug traffickers.

After the kidnapping, Sarah and her mother rushed to the Public Prosecutor, but officials refused to take a statement. The women told nearby police agencies about the corruption and abduction, but no one would help. In desperation, Sarah went to the state capital to ask the military to intercede, but once again, she was turned away.

Sarah spent the next few nights in hiding at her uncle's home. She needed to get farther away. Sarah had family in Juarez, and while going to one of the most violent cities in the western hemisphere for sanctuary is like going to hell to cool off, her uncle put her on a plane.

When Sarah landed, she found out her uncle had been murdered outside the airport for helping her escape.

In Juarez, Sarah met up with her mother and two younger brothers, who also had managed to get away, and for two months, they hunkered down in an apartment.

"I was living in shock," says Sarah. "I was unable to understand that life as I knew it was over forever. I was so scared that I only stayed inside, living in my world of fear."

One afternoon, Sarah's mother received a phone call from a hometown friend. Her father's commander was threatening to kill Sarah's grandparents if they or any family member spoke to the fugitives. Even worse, said the friend, the commander and his troops knew where Sarah and her mother were hiding in Juarez.

"I felt like my world was collapsing," says Sarah. "I did not know where to turn or where to run."

The next morning, Sarah and her mother heard over the radio that the United States was offering protection. Sarah had never thought of living among los gringos; her life was in Mexico, where the 21-year-old was already halfway through law school. But now she was out of options. The corrupt police knew her location, and they were coming.

Later that day, Dec. 30, 2008, Sarah, her mother and her two brothers walked up to the Paseo del Norte Port of Entry in El Paso and turned themselves in, requesting asylum.

Sarah was separated from her family and placed in a detention center for more than a year while she waited for her day in immigration court. When a judge finally heard the case, her claim for asylum was denied and she was ordered back to Mexico. The evidence—that cops working for a drug cartel had beaten Sarah, killed her uncle, abducted her father and raped her mother because her father fought against their illegal activities–was moot. Sarah did not meet the U.S. government's standard for asylum.

If the line between the Mexican government and the drug world ever existed, it is less distinct now then ever. Cartels take over one village, town or state at a time and buy police departments and armies along the way, fighting for control of precious drug routes and dollars. Since 2006, more than 28,000 people have been killed in the drug violence in Mexico. If someone speaks up, he is silenced, usually with a bullet made in the United States. Mexican citizens have nowhere to turn. Except north.

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  • chrisp 09/22/2010 7:28:00 AM

    Muck Fexico! Fix your $%^&, Calderon needs to shut his mouth and fix his house just like the illegal TRASH from Messyco

  • anthony 09/01/2010 1:33:00 AM

    these are poor imigrants that come to the usa to get what they feel is a normal and better hourly wage. why cant we simply allow them to get a work visa and pay their share of taxes and feed their families back home? imagine you going to another country to work because in your own country you make 10.00 dollars per day????? i feel for these hard working imigrants that only want to better their lives and be able to provide for their families... is my comment outrages!!!!!!!!!!! if you think its a bad idea then your simply a racist person..... those poor 72 imigrants that where killed in mexico did not deserve to die.... how would you like it if it was your son or father trying to better your life... trying to get to a place that can allow them to feed/clothe/etc.... the criminals will be criminals, the hard working human being is what i want to allow to enter the usa and have the american dream... the only thing folks is their american dream is to earn a good wage.

  • El Gringo 08/29/2010 9:21:00 PM

    This story needs to get into the hands of every Congressman and Senator, regardless of their political party. It is time for the U.S. to realize that drug consumption here is fueling the fear and violence in Mexico, and treat people from our No. 1 customer-country at least as well as those from "most favored" countries. Mexican military regularly intercept drugs and chemicals for concocting drugs for sale in the U.S. Ironically, these illegal drugs and chemicals are coming from some of those same "favored nations." Easy amnesty, no. Easy citizenship, no. Asylum and compassion, yes.

  • Ben Dover 08/28/2010 9:43:00 PM

    Mexico MUST make the same hard decisions Colombia did if they are to gain control of their country. That is a fact.

  • terry 08/27/2010 10:09:00 AM

    What does it mater obo is giving away America

  • AC20850 08/27/2010 8:04:00 AM

    YES,Yes SHARI!!! Mexicans SHOULD be granted asylum just like all the CUBANS. COLOMBIANS, VETNAMESE, CHINESE. Why don't you bitch about that? THe U.S. has its grubby hands ALL OVER this drug war by being THE most INSATIABLe consumer of ilegal drugs in the WORLD. This country has always made a fortune off the backs of Mexicans and now thanks to corrupt trade policies like NAFTA that benefitted the rich and screwed the poor and middle class in Mexico, there are no alternatives for them but too flee and take their chances in this country!! MEXICANS have to yell at the top of their lungs and hold both the corrupt U.S. and the corrupt, worthless, mealy mouth government in Mexico accountable for SELLING THEM OUT!!!

  • Shari 08/27/2010 3:23:00 AM

    No. No immunity, no free citizenship, no asylum. Mexico is their country, Calderone is their President. He came here and told us WE had a problem, not him. Let him protect her. I am sorry but they need to change their country and not extend their anger and violence into the U.S. which they have already started to do. IT MUST STOP.

 

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