Aug 03, 2021 15:10 UTC
  • US pro-migrant groups warn Biden, ask court to block border expulsions amid refugee influx

Pro-migrant groups have warned that they will block refugees' expulsions in court as the administration of US President Joe Biden is pressing ahead with use of an "inhumane" Trump-era expulsion policy for migrant families.

A coalition of NGOs led by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) will restart litigation over Biden's use of "inhumane" and "illegal" Title 42 order that allows US officials to send migrants back to Mexico on grounds of public health without the chance for them to seek asylum or other protections in the United States.

The Title 42 refers to the section of federal law that allows for the deportations of “persons who have recently been in a country where a communicable disease was present,” which the Trump administration used to deter illegal immigrants during last year’s COVID-19 lockdowns.

The ACLU said, "We warned the Biden administration that we'd see them in court if they continued to misuse Title 42 to unlawfully expel people seeking protection at the southern border. We meant it."

“It’s clear there’s no end in sight to Title 42 and we will pursue an immediate injunction,” said Lee Gelernt, deputy director of the ACLU's Immigrants' Rights Project.

“The Biden administration asked for some time to repair the damage done by the Trump administration to the asylum process, but it has now been seven months. That’s a more than sufficient amount of time.”

Noah Gottschalk, global policy lead for Oxfam America, one of the groups involved in the litigation, said that, "The administration is choosing to treat refugees like political pawns, and so we are eager to return to court so we can end Title 42 for families once and for all."

A top Biden border official defended the so-called Title 42 as necessary to protect US government workers, migrants and the American public amid growing concern over the highly transmissible Delta variant of COVID-19.

Migrants in cross-fire

US Customs and Border Protection said around 70,000 families – out of the 231,000 or so apprehended on the US-Mexico border this year – have been deported to Mexico on Title 42 grounds.

The deported refugees, however, have been caught in cross-fire as US local media said Mexican authorities have stopped accepting nationals from other countries expelled under Title 42.

The outcome of the court case could deepen Biden's challenges on the US-Mexico border, complicating his administration's efforts to deal with a 20-year high in migrant arrests at the southern border.

The administration has relied heavily on the support of these pro-migrant groups to help it garner public support for Biden's vision of an orderly immigration system.

If the application of Title 42 against migrant families is blocked, it could make it hard to detain incoming migrants, forcing them to be released into the United States.

There has been an influx of more than a million migrants across the US-Mexico border since January, when President Biden assumed office and vowed to unwind Trump's harsh immigration policies.

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