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US finds ally in Mexico as asylum policy marks first year

TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) - The Perla family of El Salvador has slipped into a daily rhythm in Mexico while they wait for the U.S. to decide whether to grant them asylum.

A modest home has replaced the tent they lived in at a migrant shelter. Their 7- and 5-year-old boys are in their second year of public school, and their third son is about to celebrate his second birthday in Tijuana.

They were among the first migrants sent back to Mexico under a Trump administration policy that dramatically reshaped the scene at the U.S.-Mexico border by returning migrants to Mexico to wait out their U.S. asylum process. The practice initially targeted Central Americans but has expanded to other nationalities, excluding Mexicans, who are exempt. The Homeland Security Department said Wednesday that it started making Brazilians wait in Mexico.

Today, a year after the policy began, many other migrants have given up and gone back to the home countries they fled. Others, like the Perlas, became entrenched in Mexican life. The system known as the Migrant Protection Protocols helped change Washington's relationship with Mexico and made the neighbor a key ally in President Donald Trump's efforts to turn away a surge of asylum seekers.

The Perlas are faring better than most of the roughly 60,000 asylum-seekers, many of whom live in fear of being robbed, assaulted, raped or killed. Human Rights First, a group critical of the policy, has documented 816 public reports of violent crimes against those who were returned to Mexico. Late last year, the body of a Salvadoran father of two was found dismembered in Tijuana. A Salvadoran woman was kidnapped into prostitution in Ciudad Juarez.

Rapid expansion of the policy was key to a June agreement between the U.S. and Mexico that led Trump to suspend his threat of tariff increases. The Republican president said at the time that Mexico was doing more than Democrats to address illegal immigration.

American officials praised President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's government last week after security forces repelled a caravan of Honduran migrants on Mexico's southern border with Guatemala.

'œMexico continues to be a true partner in addressing this regional crisis,'ť Mark Morgan, acting commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said on Twitter.

U.S. border authorities say the policy has contributed to a sharp drop in illegal crossings, though legal challenges could modify or even block it. Immigration judges hear cases in San Diego and El Paso, Texas, while other asylum-seekers report to tent courts in the Texas cities of Laredo and Brownsville, where they are connected to judges by video.

This month, judges in El Paso began hearing cases of people who were returned to Mexico through Nogales, Arizona, the last major corridor for illegal crossings where the policy hadn't been adopted. This has forced migrants to traverse dangerous sections of Mexico and travel hundreds of miles to make court appearances.

Richard Boren, a teacher, accompanied two Guatemalan women and their four children, ages 4 to 16, across an international bridge to their El Paso hearing. The Guatemalans traveled 13 hours by bus from the Arizona border.

'œI was really worried about them,'ť said Boren, 62, who met them after they were returned to Mexico through Arizona and reconnected with them for their first hearing.

Of nearly 30,000 cases decided through December, only 187, or fewer than 1%, of asylum-seekers sent back to Mexico won their cases, according to Syracuse University's Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. Lack of legal representation helps explain why. Fewer than 5% have lawyers.

Juan Carlos Perla, 37, said all five legal-services agencies that U.S. authorities say provide free representation in San Diego declined to represent him. Many attorneys refuse to represent clients in Mexico.

The Perlas abandoned their small bakery in El Salvador's capital for Mexico in December 2018, arriving during a small window when the Mexican government issued one-year humanitarian visas with permission to work. The family told U.S. immigration authorities that they could not pay extortion fees to gangs in San Salvador.

'œWe were told that if we did not pay the last two months, the next time they would come to our house not to beat us but to kill us,'ť Ruth Aracely Monroy, 26, Perla's partner and mother to their children, told U.S. officials, according to a transcript. 'œWe left to save our lives.'ť

After bouncing around migrant shelters in Tijuana, they found a rental house for the equivalent of $65 a month an hour's drive from downtown, where factories on the city's east side give way to dairy farms and hillsides dotted with olive trees. The older boys walk one block to school in a densely packed neighborhood of concrete-block homes with satellite dishes on the roofs.

Perla is grateful to be in Mexico, but grinding fear about the future has taken its toll on his health. "I am the driving force that keeps them from having to suffer from hunger," he says.

Monroy's sister, brother-in-law and their children fled El Salvador and became neighbors in June. Their first court date was in December in San Diego.

Perla earned enough at a factory that makes wood pallets to pay monthly rent with barely a week's work, but he lost his job when his work permit expired. While he waits on a renewal, he scrapes by as a street vendor.

The family appears to face long odds of winning asylum, especially without a lawyer. The grant rate for Salvadoran asylum-seekers is 18%, and cases involving gang violence can be among the most difficult.

The family plans to take its chances and if they lose, try to return to Tijuana to live. Their sixth, and possibly final, hearing in San Diego is scheduled for March 26.

'œMexico has been very kind,'ť Perla said.

___

Associated Press Writer Cedar Attanasio in El Paso, Texas, contributed to this report.

In this July 10, 2019, photo, Juan Carlos Perla, passes a sign leading to the border as he travels with his family from their home in Tijuana, Mexico, for an asylum hearing in San Diego. The Perlas are faring better than most of the roughly 60,000 asylum-seekers returned to Mexico under a Trump administration policy, many of whom live in fear of being robbed, assaulted, raped or killed. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) The Associated Press
In this June 19, 2019, photo, Juan Carlos Perla, left, embraces his wife, Ruth Aracely Montoya in the entrance to their home in Tijuana, Mexico. The Perla family of El Salvador has slipped into a daily rhythm in Mexico while they wait for the U.S. to decide if they will win asylum. A modest home replaced the tent they lived in at a migrant shelter. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) The Associated Press
In this June 19, 2019, photo, Juan Carlos Perla is reflected in a mirror along the wall of their temporary home in Tijuana, Mexico. The Perla family of El Salvador has slipped into a daily rhythm in Mexico while they wait for the U.S. to decide if they will win asylum. A modest home replaced the tent they lived in at a migrant shelter. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) The Associated Press
In this Jan. 28, 2020, photo, Juan Carlos Perla sits with his son, Joshua Perla as his wife, Ruth Aracely Monroy, right, passes in their home on the outskirts of Tijuana, Mexico. After fleeing violence in El Salvador, the family is among 60,000 U.S. asylum seekers returned to Mexico to wait while their claim makes its way through the U.S. court system. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) The Associated Press
In this Jan. 28, 2020, picture, Ruth Aracely Monroy, right, keeps an eye on her two sons, Nahum Perla, center, and Carlos Isai Perla, left, through a rip in the sheet that covers the front door to their home on the outskirts of Tijuana, Mexico. The Perlas are faring better than most of the roughly 60,000 asylum-seekers returned to Mexico under a Trump administration policy, many of whom live in fear of being robbed, assaulted, raped or killed. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 5, 2019, file photo, Ruth Aracely Monroy helps her son, Carlos, with his jacket among tents set up inside a shelter for migrants in Tijuana, Mexico. The Perla family of El Salvador has slipped into a daily rhythm in Mexico while they wait for the U.S. to decide if they will win asylum. A modest home replaced the tent they lived in at a migrant shelter. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 5, 2019, file image, Ruth Aracely Monroy walks with her sons as they pass two women in the red-light district of Tijuana, Mexico. They were among the first sent back to Mexico under a Trump administration policy that dramatically reshaped the scene at the U.S.-Mexico border by returning migrants to Mexico to wait out their U.S. asylum process. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) The Associated Press
In this July 10, 2019, photo, Nahum Perla, left, studies a San Diego map with his younger brother, Carlos Isai Perla, as their father, Juan Carlos Perla, right, gets ready to make the journey from their home on the outskirts of Tijuana, Mexico, to San Diego for an asylum hearing. The Perlas are faring better than most of the roughly 60,000 asylum-seekers returned to Mexico under a Trump administration policy, many of whom live in fear of being robbed, assaulted, raped or killed. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) The Associated Press
In this July 10, 2019, photo, Carlos Isai Perla looks out from a bus as he travels with his family from their home in Tijuana, Mexico, for an asylum hearing in San Diego. After fleeing violence in El Salvador, the family is among 60,000 U.S. asylum seekers returned to Mexico to wait while their claim makes its way through the U.S. court system. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) The Associated Press
In this Jan. 28, 2020, photo, Ruth Aracely Monroy, right, rushes her son, Nahum Perla, left, to school from their home on the outskirts of Tijuana, Mexico. They were among the first sent back to Mexico under a Trump administration policy that dramatically reshaped the scene at the U.S.-Mexico border by returning migrants to Mexico to wait out their U.S. asylum process. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) The Associated Press
In this July 10, 2019 image, Juan Carlos Perla, center, says goodbye to a neighbor before leaving his home in Tijuana, Mexico, for an asylum hearing in San Diego. The Perla family of El Salvador has slipped into a daily rhythm in Mexico while they wait for the U.S. to decide if they will win asylum. A modest home has replaced the tent they lived in at a migrant shelter. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) The Associated Press
In this Jan. 28, 2020, photo, Ruth Aracely Monroy, center, looks out at her son Nahum Perla, left, as he plays in front of their home on the outskirts of Tijuana, Mexico. The Perla family of El Salvador has slipped into a daily rhythm in Mexico while they wait for the U.S. to decide if they will win asylum. A modest home has replaced the tent they lived in at a migrant shelter. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) The Associated Press
In this July 10, 2019, photo, Juan Carlos Perla, center, talks to his wife, Ruth Aracely Monroy, center right, as they take a bus from their home in Tijuana, Mexico, for an asylum hearing in San Diego. The Perla family of El Salvador has slipped into a daily rhythm in Mexico while they wait for the U.S. to decide if they will win asylum. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) The Associated Press
In this June 19, 2019, photo, Ruth Aracely Montoya watches her children play from the entrance to their home in Tijuana, Mexico. After fleeing violence in El Salvador, the family is among 60,000 U.S. asylum seekers returned to Mexico to wait while their claim makes its way through the U.S. court system. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull) The Associated Press
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