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  • These are the banks of the Rio Grande

  • in Eagle Pass, Texas. On the other side is Mexico.

  • And a group of people from Central America

  • has just waded into the water to cross into the United States.

  • Some are carrying small children.

  • The river bed is uneven and the currents

  • are unpredictable.

  • Taking one wrong step could mean getting swept away.

  • Then, U.S. Border Patrol intervenes.

  • Scenes like this have recently become all too common,

  • here in the Del Rio border sector.

  • The number of migrants and asylum-seekers

  • making these risky river crossings

  • with children in tow has skyrocketed since last year.

  • Theyre bypassing official ports of entry.

  • This one, just a few hundred meters away,

  • is backlogged, as are so many along the border.

  • But most of these families are not

  • trying to sneak past Border Patrol.

  • Instead, theyre seeking out agents

  • and surrendering themselves.

  • “I’ve been in this sector for a long time,

  • and we have not seen this before and it’s bad.

  • And it’s getting worse.”

  • Bryan Kemmett has been with Border Patrol

  • for over two decades.

  • This area, right here, is ground zero.

  • This is where all the traffic comes from.

  • We can see the floatation devices

  • that theyre using.

  • You know, weve seen as many as nine people trying

  • to get into these little inflatable pools.”

  • Kemmett says agents historically

  • have seen single adults crossing the river here.

  • Now, it’s mostly families with younger and younger children.

  • He says Border Patrol resources are stretched thin.

  • There’s a lot of care that has to be taken with families

  • the feeding and changing the diapers

  • and making sure that everybody that

  • has to go to the hospital is taken to the hospital.”

  • Tending to families

  • has become a part of the agent’s daily routine.

  • We have a job to do. We enforce the laws that Congress pass.

  • But we are also making sure that while were

  • enforcing the laws, the migrants are safe,

  • and if they become distressed, we quickly go to rescue mode.”

  • But they can’t always get to everyone.

  • Just a month ago, a raft crossing the river at night

  • overturned: A 10-month-old and a 7-year-old drowned.

  • Locals have captured images

  • of people struggling for their lives

  • and bodies washing up on the river shore.

  • Border Patrol has counted seven drownings

  • since October.

  • But they say there could be more

  • that are unaccounted for.

  • They got a kid with them.”

  • They have a kid with them?”

  • Yeah.”

  • In the middle.”

  • How young?”

  • Probably like, 8?”

  • You think we should pick them up?”

  • Yes.”

  • Carlos Reinaldo Farias is a vessel commander

  • in the Del Rio sector.

  • “I'm gonna get down river of them, O.K.?”

  • If he sees migrants in distress or with children

  • in the water,

  • his task is to rescue them.

  • “I'm gonna go in neutral, all right?”

  • Since October, there have already

  • been over 300 people rescued here, up from only 31

  • the year before.

  • That’s an increase of 900 percent.

  • We're not chasing after people as much.

  • Were helping people not succumb to the river.

  • And I think of my children.

  • And it kind of hurts a little bit.

  • And I’m not gonna lie, it kind of

  • gets me a little riled up because I understand

  • they want to come over,

  • but there’s right pathways to it.

  • And I don’t think anybody should be endangering

  • their child’s life like that.”

  • But Angel Gabriel said he and his family

  • had no other choice.

  • He said they fled Honduras

  • after being targeted by local police because of a complaint

  • he had filed against them.

  • Like others we spoke to,

  • theyve come to claim asylum in the U.S.

  • But the current administration has restricted the number

  • of asylum-seekers who can come through official ports

  • of entry, and be processed daily.

  • In some places,

  • it can take months to get through

  • and some people say they can’t wait that long.

  • Angel said he and his family had been in Mexico since January

  • before deciding to make the treacherous trek

  • across the river.

  • After several days at a Border Patrol holding facility,

  • most families apprehended in the Del Rio sector

  • are released, here, at a new volunteer-run shelter.

  • Allan Ramon, and other locals here,

  • addressed the families basic needs

  • and help with the next leg of their journey:

  • joining relatives or friends in other parts of the U.S.

  • while they await a hearing.

  • These are just a handful of the hundreds of families

  • who arrive at the southern border each day,

  • and they are likely to keep coming,

  • despite the administration’s efforts to deter migration,

  • as long as they feel it’s riskier to stay at home

  • than to cross the river.

These are the banks of the Rio Grande

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為什麼邊境巡邏隊要在格蘭德河畔拯救移民家庭? (Why Border Patrol Is Rescuing Migrant Families on the Rio Grande | NYT News)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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