The initial blow came with the end of CBP One, stranding thousands of asylum seekers with and without appointments
Seven temporary shelters will be set up in Baja California as Mexico gets ready for possible mass deportations from the U.S., which were promised under incoming president Donald Trump.
BY EDUARDO GARCIA, ALFREDO CORCHADO, ANGELA KOCHERGA and GAIGE DAVILA Story edited by Dudley Althaus PUENTE NEWS COLLABORATIVE MEXICO CITY – Whenever President Claudia Sheinbaum responds to Donald Trump’s remarks about Mexico—whether it’s his threats of tariffs,
El primer golpe llegó con el fin de CBP One, dejando varados a miles de solicitantes de asilo con y sin citas.
Migrant shelters in Tijuana, located just across the border from San Diego, California, are preparing for a possible surge in migrant arrivals if U.S
Tens of thousands of appointments that were scheduled into February were canceled, including those scheduled for Jan. 20 when Trump took office.
The incoming administration wants to try the move again, potentially opening up military operations against the groups.
Sheinbaum, with Interior Secretary Rosa Icela Rodríguez, guaranteed care for Mexican nationals deported from the U.S.
Since its launch in 2023, over 900,000 appointments were facilitated by the CBP One app, but its closure has left thousands of migrants in limbo.
Migrant shelters in Tijuana — located across the border from San Diego, California — are bracing for a possible surge in the influx of migrants should US President Donald Trump carry out his mass deportation plan.
With President Trump back in office, Mexico's President Sheinbaum braces for strained relations. U.S. public support for hardline policies targeting Mexico is on the rise, and looming energy reforms and trade negotiations add to the challenges.