A new life in Mexico


By MEGAN JANETSKY

MEXICO CITY (AP) — When Angelica Delgado took a one-way flight to Mexico as she fled Cuba in December, she was set on seeking asylum in the United States.

 

Delgado, her partner and many others had put their hopes on pathways opened by the Biden administration to legally seek asylum in the U.S. They said they had no intention of hiring a smuggler to enter the U.S. illegally.

They said the risks of returning to Cuba were too great following a government clampdown on protests in recent years.

“Crossing illegally isn’t an option for us. We’d rather stay here” in Mexico, Delgado said, adding that if they crossed illegally into the U.S. and were caught “they’ll deport us and they’ll send us back to Cuba.”

Delgado, who is an architect, and her partner, a doctor, aren’t able to work in their fields in Mexico because their training in Cuba is not recognized there, she said. So for now she’s washing dishes in a market.

Mexico has long opened its doors to refugees and exiles, but asylum applications have soared in recent years, growing from 1,295 in 2013 to a record 140,982 in 2023.

That number dipped to 78,975 in 2024, as the CBP One app allowed migrants in southern Mexico to apply for appointments for entry into the U.S. before heading to the northern border.

The rise in petitions for asylum in Mexico may not result in an immediate uptick in refugees there as only a couple hundred applications can be processed each day, fueling criticism about Mexico’s capacity to take on the burgeoning asylum demand.

Amid criticisms over the backlog, President Claudia Sheinbaum has sharply boosted funding for Mexican agencies handling migration and asylum.

Venezuelan asylum-seeker Harry Luzardo, 37, said life in Mexico is an improvement after scrambling for years to scrape by in Ecuador and Chile.

Ecuador, Chile, Peru and Colombia were once the epicenter of the exodus of 8 million people from Venezuela, fleeing spiraling economic and political crises.

But with little international aid and an array of their own economic and security crises, Chile was among countries that began closing their doors to migrants.

“In Chile, you don’t receive any kind of support,” Luzardo said, waiting patiently in line earlier this month to make an asylum petition request in Mexico City. “In Chile, there’s nothing for migrants.”

Luzardo left Venezuela four years ago, but unable to get legal status to stay and work in Chile, he decided he’d try his luck at reuniting with family in the U.S.

Now, with that door closed, Mexico is his plan B.

“For now, I feel good here,” he said. Still, he conceded, he’d rather be in the U.S.

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