• Influx of Haitian migrants presents new challenge for White House

    From buh buh biden@21:1/5 to All on Fri Oct 1 04:07:19 2021
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, houston.general, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.misc

    WASHINGTON — The sight of thousands of migrants from Haiti crowded in
    miserable conditions under a Texas bridge presents the Biden
    administration with a new challenge, one that highlights the real-world consequences of the ongoing impasse in Washington over immigration reform.

    Images that seemed to show U.S. border guards using reins as whips against
    the Haitian migrants only added to the sense that the White House was once
    more overtaken by the rapidity of a worsening situation, as it had been
    after the fall of Kabul, when thousands of Afghans who had helped the
    United States rushed Hamid Karzai International Airport in hopes of
    escape.

    Asked Monday about alleged treatment of Haitians seeking asylum in the
    United States by officers of Customs and Border Protection, White House
    press secretary Jen Psaki struggled to decry the particulars without also condemning the administration’s own position, which appears to leave
    little hope for the Haitians now huddled on the banks of the Rio Grande.

    “I can’t imagine what context would make that appropriate,” Psaki
    responded. “I don’t think anyone seeing that footage would think it was acceptable or appropriate.”

    Haiti is in the midst of political upheaval caused by the July
    assassination of President Jovenel Moďse. A month later, a devastating earthquake killed thousands and left an estimated 40 percent of the
    population in some regions homeless.

    The U.S. rebuffed calls from Haiti’s interim government to deploy troops
    to help secure the nation following the assassination of Moďse, but the
    Biden administration did send a military contingent to assist in response
    to the earthquake.

    An estimated 12,000 migrants are now under a bridge in Del Rio, Texas,
    which shares a border with Mexico. But their attempts to find asylum in
    the United States appear to be in vain, as the Biden administration has
    begun deporting some of the migrants back to Haiti.

    “If Biden continues with these deportations, he’s no better than Trump,”
    one Haitian deportee told the Washington Post.

    Michael Clemens, a senior fellow at the Center for Global Development,
    said Haitians who had already been living in Central or Latin America were “easy prey for well-established smuggling networks” that falsely promised amnesty once the migrants reached the United States.

    An outdated and ineffectual immigration system is to blame, Clemens
    believes. “Why didn't they ‘get in line’ and migrate ‘the right way’?
    Because there is no line,” he says. “The U.S. provides essentially zero
    lawful migration opportunities accessible to almost all Haitian
    nationals."

    Biden has not yet addressed the situation in Del Rio, but Psaki’s
    struggles to answer questions during Monday’s briefing served to
    illustrate the bind in which the administration finds itself. She had
    trouble explaining why, for example, Afghan refugees appeared to be
    receiving significantly better treatment than their Haitian counterparts,
    or how an administration that had promised a much more humane immigration policy than that of Biden’s predecessor, Donald Trump, had resorted to deportation.

    Psaki said the Biden administration would work with officials in Haiti to improve conditions there, but stopped short of offering the migrants entry
    into the United States. Nor did she say that any border guards who may
    have used whips on migrants would be fired, even as she acknowledged that
    the footage of them evidently doing so was “horrific.”

    Conservatives seized on the images from Del Rio to paint Biden as an ineffectual protector of U.S. borders, though there is little evidence
    that his own policies are directly responsible for the influx from Haiti.

    Trump, who fashioned himself a border lawman, issued a statement on Sunday seemingly intended to stoke his followers’ outrage. “Our Country is
    rapidly becoming a cesspool of humanity,” Trump said in his statement. “Murderers, drug dealers, and criminals of all shapes and sizes are a big
    part of this massive migration,” he added, in a reminder of the xenophobia-laden 2015 speech that launched his quest for the White House.

    https://news.yahoo.com/influx-of-haitian-migrants-presents-new-challenge- for-white-house-195123462.html

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  • From SevenOverSix @21:1/5 to All on Fri Oct 1 00:36:39 2021
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, houston.general, sac.politics
    XPost: alt.politics

    Yea, they're "black" - and Joe was always buddy-buddy
    with the KKK crowd.

    Every "reason" for letting in the "Mexicans" goes
    TRIPLE for Haitians. Their country is just FUCKED.
    Makes El Salvador look like paradise.

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