Migrant Woman, Kids In Viral Tear Gas Photo Allowed Into US: Lawmakers

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
A Honduran mother and her children who were photographed fleeing from tear gas as chaos erupted at the U.S.-Mexico border last month are now
in the United States, according to two members of Congress who spent the night at a port of entry with a group of asylum seekers.Maria Lila
Meza Castro and her five children were among several asylum seekers who showed up at the Otay Mesa port of entry, between Tijuana and San
Diego
Rep
Jimmy Gomez, D-Calif., said Tuesday that Castro has applied for asylum and that her family, along with eight unaccompanied minors, have been
taken inside the San Diego facility for processing.A photograph of Castro and her 5-year-old twin daughters as they were running away from
tear gas provoked outrage on social media last month
The picture of a panicked mother and her two children, both wearing only T-shirts and diapers, contradicted the image of violent migrants
that President Donald Trump had conjured on Twitter and at campaign rallies ahead of the midterm elections.Nearly two dozen asylum seekers
were at the port of entry for several hours Monday afternoon and into Tuesday morning, huddled on the U.S
side of the border as they waited for their claims to be processed, Gomez said
He and Rep
Nanette Barragan, D-Calif., said they had been told that the facility was at capacity
They criticized border officials for keeping the asylum seekers, many of whom are children, waiting in the cold for several hours.By late
Monday evening, Castro, her five children and the unaccompanied minors were taken in for processing, Gomez and Barragan said
Another family - three children and their parents - were still waiting as of Monday morning, Gomez said.U.S
Customs and Border Protection has not confirmed or denied that Castro and her children have been taken in
The agency also has not commented on the status of the other asylum seekers who showed up with Castro's family.CBP said the deluge of asylum
seekers has strained the agency's resources
A spokeswoman said the agency has seen a 121 percent increase in the number of asylum seekers.Rising gang violence in Central America has
caused thousands to flee north to the United States, many traveling by caravan across Mexico
Almost 93,000 claims of "credible fear," the first step in seeking asylum to the United States, were processed this past fiscal year - a 67
percent jump from 2017, according to the CBP."CBP processes undocumented persons as expeditiously as possible without negating the agency's
overall mission, compromising the safety of individuals within our custody," the agency said in a statement
"The number of inadmissible individuals CBP is able to process varies based upon case complexity; available resources; medical needs;
translation requirements; holding/detention space; overall port volume; and ongoing enforcement actions."The agency added that it has to
"manage the queues" when its ports of entry reach capacity.CBP officials have faced criticism for this practice, called metering, which
limits the number of people allowed to approach border crossings to seek asylum
The agency says its ports of entry have capacity limits and were not designed to process large volumes of migrant families requesting
humanitarian assistance.Critics, such as Gomez, say that metering has nothing to do with resources but is way to deter people from coming to
the country to seek asylum.The Trump administration has sought to tighten U.S
policy and force asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their claims are being processed, a major break from long-standing rules.The
administration has also tried to deny asylum to migrants who crossed the southern border illegally, not through designated ports of entry
A federal judge has temporarily blocked the administration from doing so, saying the president violated immigration laws.Castro and her
children were part of the migrant caravan that arrived in Tijuana several weeks ago and were staying at a sports complex there
In late November, a group of migrants began to march toward the San Ysidro border crossing in San Diego, carrying flags and banners asking
Trump to help them.A majority of the group gathered near the border peacefully, while thousands of others did not march and stayed at the
sports complex
But a scuffle broke out between Mexican police in riot gear and a few dozen protesters, with some running across a dry canal and others
trying to cross through different entry points.U.S
border officials then began firing tear gas into the crowd
U.S
officials say some of the migrants threw rocks and bottles at officers
That's when Reuters photo journalist Kim Kyung-Hoon saw Castro and her children, and took the family's photo as they were running.Castro
later told Reuters that she left Honduras to reunite with her children's father, who's in the United States.(Except for the headline, this
story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)