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US suspends asylum appointments in Texas border city after extortion reports

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  • The US suspended online border crossing appointments in Nuevo Laredo.
  • There are reports that migrants face extortion from criminal gangs.
  • The US makes 1 250 appointments available per day.


US asylum appointments at a dangerous Texas-Mexico border crossing can no longer be scheduled via an online app following reports that migrants face extortion in Mexico.

Advocates for migrants in the Mexican city of Nuevo Laredo, just across the border from Laredo, were informed of the suspension by a US consular official, a 2 June message reviewed by Reuters showed. 

No reason for the change was stated.

A website for the app, called CBP One, no longer lists Laredo as a city where asylum seekers can schedule appointments. 

READ | The US is sending a lot more troops to the border with Mexico, in anticipation of a migrant surge

Nuevo Laredo has long been notorious for widespread kidnapping and extortion of migrants.

US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) did not respond to requests for comment.

The appointments are a key part of a border system put in place by US President Joe Biden last month when Covid-era restrictions known as Title 42 expired.

Biden's administration opened up legal pathways, including via the app, while also implementing a strict new regulation that could deny asylum to many migrants crossing the border illegally.

Advocates and some Democrats argue that migrants should not be forced to wait in dangerous conditions in northern Mexico, particularly as demand outstrips the 1 250 CBP One appointments available per day.

The suspension was first reported by the Associated Press.

LAS TEKAS, COLOMBIA - OCTOBER 07: Migrants, most f
Migrants, most from Haiti, prepare to depart a base camp towards the infamous Darien Gap while on their journey towards the United States at Las Tekas, Colombia.

Lately, criminal groups in Nuevo Laredo have allegedly demanded payment from migrants headed to the port of entry, including those with CBP One appointments, according to a May report from the Strauss Centre at the University of Texas at Austin.

An advocate in Nuevo Laredo, who requested anonymity due to safety fears, said criminals have demanded as much as $500 per person.

Human Rights First recorded over 13 000 reports of violent attacks against migrants in Mexico in 2021 and 2022.

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