Biden admin lets migrants with extreme circumstances enter U.S. while awaiting asylum

Now, under the Biden administration, Customs and Border Protection has granted parole, allowing entry to the United States for these and other immigrants with extreme circumstances as they await their asylum hearings.
The Department of Homeland
Security confirmed to NBC News that it has begun the process of granting parole
on a case-by-case basis even before the Biden administration officially begins
to process the tens of thousands of asylum seekers awaiting entry to the U.S.
in cities like Matamoros, Mexico.
“After more than two years developing
investigation-based recommendations and policy guidance concerning the civil
rights implications of making asylum-seekers wait in Mexico,” a DHS
spokesperson said, “[The] Office of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties is working
with other DHS components to implement Executive Orders related to DHS asylum
and border policies to ensure compliance with civil and human rights
protections and considerations,”
“Paroles into the United States conducted by
U.S. Customs and Border Protection continue to be handled on a case-by-case
basis.”
One official, who could not give
exact numbers, said "a steady stream" of parole applicants has
recently been allowed to enter the U.S.
The Nicaraguan woman spoke to NBC
News on the condition of anonymity, afraid that revealing her identity could
lead to harm if she is eventually deported. She fled political violence in
Nicaragua and traveled to the U.S.-Mexico border with her then 4-year-old
daughter and waited for entry from October 2019 until February 2021.
"When I first got there, I cried too much.
Because, first of all, it was so dangerous," she said. She described
hearing gunfire at night as she huddled with her daughter in the home of a
woman who took them in. "We didn't know what was going to happen next."
One morning soon after her
arrival, she and her daughter waited more than four hours on a bridge between
Matamoros and Brownsville, Texas, hopeful that they would be able to enter the
U.S. and make their claim for asylum. They were turned back.
"I remember when we were walking back on the
bridge, [my daughter] started crying," she said. "She didn't
understand. 'I thought today was going to be the day I see my Grandma.'"
Then she started experiencing pain
in her breast and was diagnosed with stage three cancer.
"(The doctor) told me, 'Your breast cancer
is in stage 3. You cannot play with this. You have to get help now," she
said, "or you're going to be counting your days of life.'"
The diagnosis did not help her
gain access or any special protection under the Trump administration, even
though U.S. immigration attorneys from the advocacy group Project Corazon were
advocating on her behalf.
Then, earlier this month, her
lawyers brought her good news. Because of her medical condition, she would be
allowed to live with her mother in the U.S. while she waited for her day in court
to present her asylum case.
Now, she is living with her mother
in Miami, a reunion that brought tears of joy for them both.
"it was the happiest day of my life when I saw
my mom, and I could hold her," she said. "And I don't have to stress
that something is going to happen to me, my daughter."
She said her daughter, who is with
her in Miami, is most excited about starting school.
But finding medical help without
legal status in the U.S. or health insurance has proven to be another
challenge. She has still not seen a U.S.-based doctor.
"I called one organization. They told me they
will work on sending me a letter for an appointment. Because I'm an immigrant,
it's hard for me. Very hard."
The Biden administration has said it will start processing people who have been waiting under "Remain in Mexico" on Friday, beginning with those who have been waiting the longest and those who are deemed most vulnerable. But so far it remains unclear how those in need of medical care for chronic conditions will be treated once they are admitted.