Proposed U.S. asylum rule limits access to protection and fuels increase in vulnerability
The proposed “Securing the Border” rule on asylum at the U.S.’s southern border imposes new limitations on access to protection for persons of concern in Mexico and Central America. It also increases their vulnerability and exposure to violence and other forms of abuse.
Additional limitations on asylum eligibility and reduction on safeguards in asylum processing will hinder access to protection. This is the clear message from the Danish Refugee Council (DRC) in its Submission of Comments on the impacts of the proposed Interim Final Rule (IFR) on “Securing the Border” from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and Department of Justice.
Based on solid experience with humanitarian response to mixed migration flows in Mexico as well as data collected from protection monitoring activities, DRC recommends the Agencies to rescind the IFR or take necessary precautions to mitigate negative impacts.
DRC finds it particularly concerning how the rule significantly limits asylum eligibility for Mexican nationals. Another serious concern raised in DRC’s comment is the limited access for persons of concern to official information on access to U.S. territory which is key to their informed decision-making. If the rule is maintained, it will ultimately put persons of concern at even higher risk when pushed back into Mexico or summarily returned to countries of origin.
The comment was recently released and can be read in its full version here.
While they may be effective in reducing the numbers of asylum-seekers received and processed by U.S. authorities, they simultaneously fuel a dramatic increase in vulnerability and exposure to violence and other forms of abuse and denying access to protection.
DRC comment on the impacts of the proposed Interim Final Rule (IFR)
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