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Trump's wall alone unlikely to stop migrant families

MCALLEN, Texas (AP) - Maria Orbelina Cortez says she fled El Salvador for the U.S. after her husband attacked her and knocked a pan of scalding oil onto her youngest son's head.

After quietly planning for months, she took the 3-year-old boy and his two brothers and headed north without telling her husband. As she spoke in the yard of a Catholic Charities shelter in South Texas, the boy played nearby. He had a hairless scar on top of his head in the shape of a jagged, capital "T."

"I will always feel culpable," said Orbelina, 30. "Always."

President Donald Trump's push for a $5.7 billion wall - a demand that triggered the longest government shutdown in history - is unlikely on its own to stop families with stories like Orbelina's, who are crossing the U.S.-Mexico border by the thousands each month.

The Trump administration wants to use that money to construct more than 200 miles (320 kilometers) of border wall. Most of those miles would likely go in South Texas, where more people cross illegally than anywhere else.

Congress has already funded 33 miles (53 kilometers) of new barrier construction here. But much of that new barrier will be built north of the Rio Grande, which carves a natural boundary between the U.S. and Mexico. That means migrants will still be able to reach American soil in front of the newly constructed barrier and request asylum.

The latest proposal Trump and Senate Republicans made to fund the wall includes provisions that could possibly be far more consequential than the wall, by making the already difficult task of winning asylum even harder.

Their bill would require all asylum claims to be in "the national interest" to be granted and allow more claims to be judged as frivolous. It would also require all Central American children arriving on their own to seek asylum in their countries of origin, not in the United States.

Trump did not describe those provisions in his speech Saturday announcing the proposal. But Greg Chen, director of government relations at the American Immigration Lawyers Association, said they amounted to "a historic change" and criticized the bill. Top Democrats have already said they won't support it.

Sister Norma Pimentel, executive director of Catholic Charities in the Rio Grande Valley, said the families at the organization's shelter sometimes resort to crossing the Rio Grande illegally out of desperation after being stopped at bridges.

"It is important that we secure our borders, that we keep our country safe from criminals," Pimentel said. She added that Trump "needs to meet the families that are not criminals. He needs to meet the children and the great number of families that are here asking for protection."

Deysi Yanira Centeno reached the border a month after fleeing El Salvador, where gangs threatened her 15-year-old daughter.

Centeno said a human smuggler told her crossing the Rio Grande would be easier than trying to enter the U.S. through a bridge, where customs agents often tell asylum seekers they have no room to process them. So she paid $20 each for herself, her teenage daughter, and two children ages 11 and 7, to board a raft. She described how scared she was as it slowly moved across the river.

"In that moment you think about life and death," she said. "You think, 'Maybe it would have been better for me not to leave my country.'"

Others refuse to cross the river illegally, insisting they will only seek asylum at an official border crossing. Many of the border crossings in South Texas and elsewhere on the border turn away asylum seekers or accept very few daily, leading families to camp out at the bridges or wait in shelters in Mexico.

Esperanza Vargas, who fled Nicaragua with her 18-year-old son, waited for weeks next to the Mexican side of the bridge connecting Matamoros, Mexico, and Brownsville, Texas. Vargas and her son feared that they would be targeted in the government's ongoing conflict with paramilitary groups.

"You can't say we're a danger for the U.S. if we're here," Vargas said. "If we're here, it's because we want to do things the right way."

Trump administration officials argue many asylum seekers are making illegitimate claims to enter the U.S. for years while their cases are processed. Immigration courts last year denied asylum in about 65 percent of cases.

The administration has long fought to limit asylum protections. A federal judge in December struck down a policy change restricting asylum for victims of domestic violence. The Department of Homeland Security has also announced a plan to make all asylum seekers at the border wait in Mexico.

Most of the people who arrived at the border had taken several weeks to get there. Some admitted they hired smugglers to get them through Mexico. Others said they took buses on their own.

But the women waiting at Catholic Charities all said they had no choice.

Sitting in the yard of the shelter, wearing an ankle monitor, Orbelina said her husband would often attack her after coming home from a night of drinking. Sometimes he would hit their children too, she said.

She says she reported him to police in their town of Sonsonate, west of the capital of San Salvador. But her husband told police she had attacked him, and he wasn't arrested, she said.

It took six months to plan her escape, saving money and relying on her parents in California, who sent money as she moved through Mexico. She said she entered the U.S. through an official border crossing at Progreso, Texas, and is now seeking asylum.

She plans to join her parents and file for a divorce and a protection order.

"My hope is to work and to see my children grow up," Orbelina said. "I see them happy, but I know that at times they suffer."

In this Friday, Jan. 11, 2019, photo, Maria Orbelina Cortez, right, walks with her 3-year-old son, Julio, center, and a worker at the Catholic Charities shelter in McAllen, Texas. Orbelina says she decided to flee El Salvador after her husband attacked her and caused a pan of hot oil to fall, scalding Julio and leaving a scar on his head. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
In this Friday, Jan. 11, 2019, photo, Deysi Yanira Centeno, wipes a tear as she describes fleeing El Salvador with three of her children, ages 7, 11, and 15, at the Catholic Charities shelter in McAllen, Texas. Centeno reached the border a month after fleeing El Salvador, where gangs threatened her 15-year-old daughter. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
In this Thursday, Jan. 10, 2019, photo, Clarisa Landaverry, right, talks with her daughter, 9-year-old Monica, inside the encampment for asylum seekers waiting to cross the nearby U.S.-Mexico bridge, in Matamoros, Mexico. Asylum seekers at the border sometimes wait weeks or months to enter the U.S. for processing. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
In this Friday, Jan. 11, 2019, photo, Darly Sotto, 21, of Guatemala holds her son, 1-year-old Jorge Sotto, as people check into the Catholic Charities shelter in McAllen, Texas. As parents flee Central America with their young children, advocates argue a border wall would not stop families and instead misjudges what they say is a humanitarian crisis. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
In this Friday, Jan. 11, 2019, photo, Maria Isabel Soriano, 11, left, holds the child of another family at the Catholic Charities shelter in McAllen, Texas. Soriano fled El Salvador with her mother and two siblings. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
In this Friday, Jan. 11, 2019, photo, Maria Orbelina Cortez walks with her three sons, ages 11, 5, and 3, at the Catholic Charities shelter in McAllen, Texas. Orbelina says that after fleeing El Salvador, she hopes to find refuge for her children with her parents in California. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
In this Friday, Jan. 11, 2019, photo, Maria Orbelina Cortez's 3-year-old son, Julio, walks in the hallway of the Catholic Charities shelter in McAllen, Texas. Orbelina says she decided to flee El Salvador after her husband attacked her and caused a pan of hot oil to fall, scalding the child and leaving a scar on his head. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
In this Friday, Jan. 11, 2019, photo, Maria Orbelina Cortez's 3-year-old son, Julio, plays with a soccer ball at the Catholic Charities shelter in McAllen, Texas. Orbelina says she decided to flee El Salvador after her husband attacked her and caused a pan of hot oil to fall, scalding the child and leaving a scar on his head. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
In this Friday, Jan. 11, 2019, photos, a line of migrants recently released by U.S. immigration authorities waits to check in at the Catholic Charities shelter in McAllen, Texas. The latest proposal President Donald Trump and Senate Republicans made to fund the border wall includes provisions that would be far more consequential than the wall, by making the already difficult task of winning asylum even harder. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
In this Thursday, Jan. 10, 2019, photo a migrant seeking asylum waits in Matamoros, Mexico, on a bridge connecting the U.S. and Mexico. The latest proposal President Donald Trump and Senate Republicans made to fund the wall includes provisions that would be far more consequential than the wall, by making the already difficult task of winning asylum even harder. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
In this Thursday, Jan. 10, 2019, photo pedestrians pass a makeshift encampment where migrants seeking asylum wait in Matamoros, Mexico, on a bridge connecting the U.S. and Mexico. The latest proposal President Donald Trump and Senate Republicans made to fund the border wall includes provisions that would be far more consequential than the wall, by making the already difficult task of winning asylum even harder. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
In this Friday, Jan. 11, 2019, photo, Marianela Ramirez Watson, left, stands outside the Good Neighbor Settlement House in Brownsville, Texas, as a person walks by the shelter for migrants released from U.S. immigration detention. The Trump administration wants to construct more than 200 miles of border wall. Most of those miles would likely go in South Texas. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
In this Friday, Jan. 11, 2019, photo, Marianela Ramirez Watson holds a hygiene kit to place in backpacks that she hands out to migrants at the Good Neighbor Settlement House in Brownsville, Texas, where she is a board member. Good Neighbor is one of several shelters along the U.S.-Mexico border taking in surging numbers of migrants. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
In this Thursday, Jan. 10, 2019, photo, an immigrant passes through a makeshift doorway in the encampment for asylum seekers waiting to cross the nearby U.S.-Mexico bridge, in Matamoros, Mexico. The latest proposal President Donald Trump and Senate Republicans made to fund the wall includes provisions that would be far more consequential than the wall, by making the already difficult task of winning asylum even harder. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) The Associated Press
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