Monday , November 25 2024

Fire at migrant detention facility in Mexico kills 39

28-03-2023

MEXICO CITY/ HOUSTON: Dozens of people were killed and injured after a fire started in an immigration detention facility in northern Mexico near the US border.

The blaze occurred late Monday at a facility in Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso, Texas.

Images from the scene showed ambulances, firefighters and vans from the morgue around the smoke-covered facility with rows of bodies lying under shimmery silver sheets.

At least 39 people died in the fire. Twenty-nine injured people were taken to hospitals, said Mexico’s National Immigration Institute in a statement. The facility was holding 68 adult men from Central and South America, it said.

Mexico’s attorney general’s office launched an inquiry and has investigators at the scene, according to media reports.

Vinagly, a Venezuelan woman, stood outside the immigration centre, desperate for information about her 27-year-old husband detained there.

“He was taken away in an ambulance,” she told media. “They (immigration officials) don’t tell you anything. A family member can die and they don’t tell you he’s dead.”

Ciudad Juarez is a major crossing point for people entering the United States. Its shelters are full of migrants and refugees waiting for opportunities to cross, or who have requested asylum in the US and are waiting out the process.

The US administration of President Joe Biden has been hoping to stem the record tide of people undertaking often dangerous journeys organized by human smugglers to get to the US.

In February, Biden proposed new restrictions on asylum seekers, hoping to stifle the rush of people to the southern border when COVID-related controls are lifted.

The new rules say those who arrive at the border and simply cross into the United States will no longer be eligible for asylum. Instead, they must apply first for asylum in one of the countries they pass through to get to the US border, or apply online via a US government app.

About 200,000 people try to cross the border from Mexico to the US each month. Most are from Central and South America, and cite poverty and violence back home in requesting asylum.

A recent report by the International Organization for Migration said since 2014 about 7,661 people have died or disappeared on route to the US, while 988 perished in accidents or while travelling in subhuman conditions. (Int’l News Desk)

Check Also

IMF approves third review of Sri Lanka’s $2.9bn bailout

25-11-2024 COLOMBO/ WASHINGTON: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has approved the third review of Sri …