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Mexico seeks to curb ‘abuse’ of asylum system by migrants who do not plan to stay

Mexico City, Mexico
Reuters

Mexico’s overwhelmed asylum agency is strengthening efforts to weed out high numbers of applicants who “abuse” the system while passing through Mexico to reach the United States, Mexico’s top asylum official said on Monday.

Mexico has the world’s third highest number of asylum applications after the United States and Germany, reflecting growing numbers of refugee seekers that have strained resources at the Mexican Commission for Refugee Assistance (COMAR).

FILE PHOTO: Migrants rest outside the Siglo XXI migrant detention center as they seek humanitarian visas to cross the country and reach the U.S., in Tapachula, Chiapas state, Mexico, January 11, 2023. REUTERS/Jacob Garcia

Migrants rest outside the Siglo XXI migrant detention centre as they seek humanitarian visas to cross the country and reach the US, in Tapachula, Chiapas state, Mexico, on 11th January1, 2023. PICTURE: Reuters/Jacob Garcia

Once migrants request asylum, they are exempt from deportation and are eligible to seek work, motivating many to file applications even without the intent to stay in Mexico, said Andres Ramirez, COMAR’s director.

“It’s an abuse of the asylum system,” he told reporters at COMAR’s busy Mexico City office. “Treating COMAR like a kind of travel agency.”

The agency recently began a pilot in the southern city of Tapachula near the Guatemala border, where it has its biggest load of applicants, geared at quickly rejecting cases that do not merit asylum, Ramirez added. 

He noted some applicants falsely believe COMAR distributes permits allowing travel within Mexico. In reality, asylum seekers typically must stay in the state where they began their cases.

“This has put us in a situation of near-breakdown,” Ramirez told a news conference. 



COMAR received close to 119,000 applications last year, slightly fewer than the year before.

This January, the number more than doubled from the same month in 2022. The claims included 430 from Afghans – a soaring increase from past years. 

Yet Ramirez noted many Afghans are unlikely to see out their cases in Mexico, where so many aspects of daily life from religion to food are so different than home.

“Many Afghans do not necessary want to stay in Mexico,” he said. “In the United States, there’s a much bigger Afghan community than what we have here.”

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