Daily Border Links posts will end this week, on November 8, the Friday after the U.S. elections; we lack resources to maintain this tempo indefinitely. We have been producing these since last November; the archive will remain online.
WOLA will continue to produce Weekly Border Updates, as we have for over four years, and we will continue to send them to the mailing list that you can join here.
Developments
For the second time since October 1, Mexican soldiers have shot and killed migrants. Members of Mexico’s recently created National Guard, much of whose personnel were transferred from the Army, opened fire on a vehicle near Tecate, Baja California, along the border east of Tijuana. Two Colombian migrants were killed in the November 2 incident, and four others were wounded.
Mexico’s Defense Secretariat (SEDENA, the Army and Air Force) contended that the soldiers fired their weapons in self-defense after alleged smugglers fired on them. Witnesses dispute that: “We had no weapons, we are not criminals, they were never shot at,” a survivor told the Tijuana-based investigative publication Zeta. Witnesses say that, before aiding the wounded, the guard members spent a few minutes cleaning up their spent ammunition cartridges, which, if true, would constitute altering a crime scene.
Three guard members who opened fire have been taken off duty while investigations proceed.
On October 1, soldiers opened fire on a vehicle carrying migrants, killing six. In that case, too, SEDENA claimed that the soldiers responded after hearing “detonations,” though witnesses disputed that.
- “Guardia Nacional Acribilla a Migrantes Colombianos en Tecate.“ (Revista Zeta (Tijuana Mexico), November 4, 2024).
- Mara Yanez, ““Repelieron Agresion Armada”: Sedena Ante Asesinato de Migrantes por Gn en la Rumorosa“ (Revista Zeta (Tijuana Mexico), November 4, 2024).
- “Mueren Dos Migrantes Colombianos en Supuesto Enfrentamiento Entre Guardia Nacional y Civiles Armados en Tecate, Baja California“ (Animal Politico (Mexico), November 4, 2024).
- Natalie Venegas, “Mexico’s National Guard Kills 2 Colombians, Wounds 4 Others Near Us Border“ (Newsweek, November 4, 2024).
- Alejandro Santos Cid, “El Ejercito Argumenta Que Mato a Dos Migrantes Colombianos en Defensa Propia en Baja California“ (El Pais (Spain), November 4, 2024).
On Monday, the final day before Election Day, Republican candidate Donald Trump vowed, if elected, to impose a 25 percent tariff on Mexican goods, escalating to 100 percent, if Mexico’s government does not act to stop migrants and fentanyl from crossing its northern border. He said that if he wins today’s elections, his first call will be to Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum to convey this threat.
- Jeff Stein, “Trump Threatens Up to 100 Percent Tariffs on Mexico Over Immigration“ (The Washington Post, November 4, 2024).
- Jesus Mesa, “Trump Reveals Who His First Call Would Be as President“ (Newsweek, November 4, 2024).
- “Trump Warns, if Elected, He’ll Impose Tariffs on Mexico, China Over Fentanyl“ (Reuters, U.S. News and World Report, November 4, 2024).
- Brett Samuels, “Trump Vows 25 Percent Tariff on Mexico Unless It Cracks Down on Border Crossings“ (The Hill, November 4, 2024).
- “Trump Amenaza Con Imponer 25% de Aranceles a Mexico Si No Frena el Paso De “Criminales y Drogas”; Se Queja por “Invasion” de Migrantes“ (El Universal (Mexico), November 4, 2024).
On the eve of the U.S. election, CBS News spoke with migrants awaiting CBP One appointments in shelters in Nogales, Sonora. They fear a Donald Trump victory today would end the CBP One program. “They’re very scared. They think that the asylum system is going to close,” said immigration attorney Alba Jaramillo.
- Camilo Montoya-Galvez, Suvro Banerji, ““They’re Very Scared”: Migrants Anxiously Monitor U.S. Election, Fearing Trump Win“ (CBS News, November 5, 2024).
Reporting from just north of Mexico City, the Los Angeles Times Patrick McDonnell spoke with migrants determined to come to the United States regardless of who is elected. “If you’re a migrant, you’re going to suffer whoever is president,” a Honduran man said.
- Patrick J. Mcdonnell, “U.S.-Bound Migrants Say the Election Doesn’t Matter: ‘You’re Going to Suffer Whoever Is President’“ (The Los Angeles Times, November 4, 2024).
A measure on the ballot in Arizona would make it a state crime to cross the international border without authorization, the Associated Press reported. Proposition 314 resembles S.B. 4, the Texas law–currently on hold facing legal challenges–that could empower law enforcement to enforce a separate state-level immigration policy, and to stop anyone on suspicion of having crossed the border illegally.
- Gabriel Sandoval, “Voters in Battleground Arizona to Decide if Local Agencies Can Police Illegal Immigration“ (Associated Press, Associated Press, November 5, 2024).
Speaking with Cronkite News, border-area political and law-enforcement leaders voiced reluctance to finding themselves having to use scarce resources to enforce immigration laws, a mission for which they are not trained, if Proposition 314 passes.
- Gabriel Garza, “Arizona Proposition 314: Border Officials Weigh in on Immigration Enforcement“ (Cronkite News, November 4, 2024).
At one of the busiest official border crossings between Colombia and Venezuela, authorities are measuring an increase in the number of Venezuelan citizens departing the country. “What is undeniable is that the exodus is still latent along this border and has increased after the electoral process of July 28,” reported the Venezuelan daily La Nación. The paper referred to presidential elections almost certainly won by the political opposition, followed by a wave of repression carried out by the current regime, which denies that result.
- Jonathan Maldonado, “Aumentan Viajeros Que Sellan Sus Pasaportes en San Antonio“ (La Nación (Venezuela), November 4, 2024).
Analyses and Feature Stories
Thomas Cartwright at Witness at the Border published his latest monthly report on Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) deportation flights. The agency removed migrants on an average of 5.3 flights per weekday in October, up slightly from September but down from over 6.0 per weekday during the summer. Fewer migrant apprehensions at the border are the likeliest reason for the drop. The top removal destination countries were Guatemala (37 flights in October), Honduras (20), Mexico (20), El Salvador (11), Colombia (9), and Ecuador (9).
The report noted that Panama operated 25 deportation flights between August 1 and November 2, with 989 people—about 1.5 percent of Darién Gap migration—taken to Colombia (19), Ecuador (5), and India (1).
- Thomas H. Cartwright, “Ice Air Report October 2024 and Last 12 Months“ (Witness at the Border, November 4, 2024).
At InsightCrime, Steven Dudley and Parker Asmann highlighted the sharp contrasts between two Arizona border-zone sheriffs. Mark Dannels of Cochise County is an outspoken border and migration hardliner who often appears on Fox News and as a Republican congressional hearing witness. David Hathaway, from neighboring Santa Cruz County (which includes Nogales), favors a more humanitarian approach that prevents harm to migrants.
- Parker Asmann, Steven Dudley, “Two Us-Mexico Border Sheriffs, Two Visions on Immigration and Security“ (InsightCrime, November 4, 2024).
On the Right
- Adam Shaw, “Harris-Trump Showdown: Where They Stand on This Top Issue for Voters“ (Fox News, November 4, 2024).