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Stranded at the border: Migrants are in limbo after Trump cancels border app appointments

The Paso del Norte bridge that connects Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, with El Paso, Texas, on Tuesday, January 21.
Abel Alvarado/CNN via CNN Newsource
January 22, 2025

Ciudad Juarez, Mexico (CNN) โ€” When Jose Guillermo Cabrera arrived last weekend in Ciudad Juarez, a city along the US-Mexico border, he was full of hope. โ€œI felt like every migrant, excited, after so much time waiting,โ€ Cabrera, 33, told CNN.

Ciudad Juarez was meant to be a city of passage for Cabrera and his family, a final stop before their long-awaited moment in front of US immigration authorities to request asylum.

For several months, Cabrera had been applying for a shot at having his asylum claim heard by US authorities, while navigating around southern Mexico. In early January, confirmation came that he had finally secured an appointment.

Stranded at the border: Migrants are in limbo after Trump cancels border app appointments
Stranded at the border: Migrants are in limbo after Trump cancels border app appointments

But a day before the appointment, a stroke of President Donald Trumpโ€™s pen shut down the US immigration processing app known as CBP One โ€“ and with it, Cabreraโ€™s hopes.

โ€œSo much time waiting, and now this surprise,โ€ Cabrera said with a voice of defeat. โ€œThey shut off our dreams.โ€

Until Trumpโ€™s inauguration on January 20, migrants seeking asylum from violence or persecution had the option to schedule an appointment at a legal US port of entry to make their case.

โ€œWe are left adrift, we have no resources left, we arrived in Juarez with money to pay for one night in a hotel,โ€ the native Venezuelan said.

Stranded at the border: Migrants are in limbo after Trump cancels border app appointments
Erlianny Colombie from Cuba, holds his CBP One appointment confirmation for Tuesday, January 21.

Cabrera is one of several migrants CNN spoke to who recently arrived in Ciudad Juarez after weeks of travel for their CBP One appointments, only to find the sessions they had been given were canceled.

Now, many are stranded with no money or any sense of what to do next.

It was just below freezing in Ciudad Juarez on Monday when Cabrera realized what had happened, but he and his family decided to still try to explain the situation to US immigration authorities at the Paso del Norte bridge, which connects the Mexican city with the Texas city of El Paso.

โ€œI had a thread of hope,โ€ Cabrera told CNN, fighting the cold in a leather jacket and with a winter mask covering most of his face.

Stranded at the border: Migrants are in limbo after Trump cancels border app appointments
Venezuelan migrant Jose Guillermo Cabera shows his CBP One appointment confirmation for Tuesday, January 21.

But they were quickly turned away. Cabrera and his family were instead directed to a local Mexican public agency for further guidance. There, they were given some warm soup, but got little information on how to pursue their case.

โ€˜We did everything legallyโ€™

Erlianny Colombie, 41, left Cuba seven months ago and had been living in the southern Mexico town of Tapachula along with three relatives.

After finding a place to work and live in Tapachula, he applied for an appointment with US officials.

โ€œWe got lucky, we got an appointment,โ€ Colombie told CNN. โ€œSo, we bought bus tickets, we obtained permission to move through Mexico, a lot of sacrifice, we did everything legally.โ€

But the travel and costs of obtaining paperwork stretched his resources to breaking point. โ€œWe had enough money for the night before our appointment (โ€ฆ) and now we are on the streets,โ€ he said.

Colombie โ€“ who says he fled Cuba due to political persecution โ€“ says he โ€œunderstandsโ€ Trumpโ€™s decision but asks the president to reconsider for those who already had an appointment.

โ€œIf we already were in the process, Mr. Trump, please continue with the scheduled appointments, donโ€™t leave us here stranded,โ€ he said.

The sentiment is echoed by other migrants, who say they carefully followed the rules given to them by the United States, and deserve to be heard out.

โ€œGive us another opportunity,โ€ Venezuelan migrant Rosalyn Vargas, 33, asked of Trump.

โ€œWe came here for a brighter future, we are human beings, we did everything legally, we followed the process,โ€ Vargas said from a shelter where sheโ€™s staying with other relatives.

โ€œWe all have a story to tell. I fled Venezuela because I was being persecuted, please give us our appointments back,โ€ her compatriot Oswal Paredes told CNN.

Who is helping the migrants at the border?

Migrant shelters in Ciudad Juarez are taking in some of the migrants who have now been stranded.

Casa del Migrante, a shelter about 10 miles from the border, says they are offering shelter, food and psychological help to migrants whose appointments were canceled.

โ€œRight now, they are emotionally destroyed, after battling so much, all the walking, a lot of them crossed the Dariรฉn Gap,โ€ Ivonne Lopez, a social worker, from Casa del Migrante told CNN, referring to a treacherous jungle passage that many migrants must make on foot to cross from South America to North America.

โ€œThey want a sign of hope, they want to know whatโ€™s going to happen with them, they had their appointment canceled, but is there another option,โ€ Lopez said, adding that โ€œthankfully, they have lawyers helping the migrants.โ€

Some local officials have taken a blunter approach with migrants, underlining that itโ€™s unrealistic to keep trying to reach the US.

โ€œWe have to tell it like it is, sadly, all appointments are suspended as well as any possibility of getting one,โ€ Enrique Serrano, a coordinator from Chihuahua stateโ€™s population agency told CNN.

โ€œThey wonโ€™t obtain anything by trying at the crossing points hoping for the US to receive them,โ€ he said.

Serrano says Mexican city, state and federal officials are working together to address the migrant crisis in Ciudad Juarez and other border towns.

โ€œMigrants here should stay calm, there are no instructions for raids here on the Mexican side, the instructions weโ€™ve been given is to give them proper treatment,โ€ Serrano said.

โ€œShelters in Juarez are at 40% capacity,โ€ Serrano also said, noting that many Mexican border towns are expanding protective spaces in anticipation of mass deportations from the US.

For now, all of the migrants CNN interviewed said they would not give up โ€“ preferring to remain in limbo near the border and continue to hope their voices reach Trump, after having come so close.

โ€œEverything changed from one moment to another, we went from hope to desperation,โ€ 23-year-old Fabian Delgado said from a shelter.

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