About 200 asylum seekers in a caravan of Central Americans are not being allowed to turn themselves in to U.S. border inspectors for a second straight day.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection said a San Diego border crossing facility has reached capacity.
Mexican authorities allowed about 50 people to cross a long bridge leading to the U.S. inspection facility on Sunday but U.S. authorities told them to wait.
Customs and Border Protection said it will resume processing when it has more space and resources.
Irineo Mujica of Pueblos Sin Fronteras, the group organizing the caravan, said the U.S. refusal is a “farce” aimed at avoiding having to deal with the Central American asylum seekers.
About 50 asylum seekers camped overnight on a sidewalk outside the Mexican entrance to the border crossing.
Volunteers with Pueblos Sin Fronteras are told by US Customs and Border Protection that it usually takes one to two days to process asylum seekers at San Ysidro.
— Adolfo Flores (@aflores) April 30, 2018
US Customs and Border Protection says they're at capacity and can't process asylum claims. Days ago DHS Sec. Nielsen said the agency was sending additional "asylum officers, ICE attorneys, DOJ Immigration Judges, and DOJ prosecutors to the Southern border" because of the caravan pic.twitter.com/hLmW1XQmSE
— Adolfo Flores (@aflores) April 30, 2018
Immigrant rights advocates at the border say migrants seeking asylum are commonly told there is no room to process them by Customs and Border Protection and they have to wait. This is what it looked like inside the port of entry last night. pic.twitter.com/PsbmscAPIb
— Adolfo Flores (@aflores) April 30, 2018
Border Patrol is continuing to deny entry to #RefugeeCaravan asylum seekers, who have slept outside all night in the cold in order to cross.@PuebloSF @AlOtroLado_Org @NDLON @CosechaMovement @Carecen_LA @WomenBelong @latinorebels @CIYJA @alex_mensing @NLGnews #RefugeesWelcome pic.twitter.com/c4QOoMNYkI
— abolish the nonprofit imperialist complex (@pjpodesta) April 30, 2018
The group from the caravan has been waiting at the port of entry for nearly 15 hours to ask for asylum.
"That's okay I'll wait," said one woman seeking asylum as she held her baby. "Just give me the hope that I will be able to ask for asylum."
— Adolfo Flores (@aflores) April 30, 2018
The US Government is not allowing asylum seekers from the #RefugeeCaravan in, claiming the port of entry is at capacity. Sad that a police force that can round up & detain thousands of immigrants a day isn't willing to process 200 refugees.@latinorebels @ACLU @wrcommission pic.twitter.com/QLTb08D3Gz
— Alex Mensing (@alex_mensing) April 30, 2018
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A group of roughly 200 people traveling from Central America, arrived at the U.S.-Mexico border Sunday seeking political asylum and were greeted by supporters across a border fence in the U.S. holding welcome signs. But upon the group’s arrival, U.S. immigration officials announced that the port of entry in San Diego County had reached capacity.
Officials had warned that the crossing might fill up as its capacity is just around 300 people, according to the Associated Press.
“At this time, we have reached capacity at the San Ysidro port of entry for CBP officers to be able to bring additional persons traveling without appropriate entry documentation into the port of entry for processing,” Commissioner Kevin McAleenan said in a statement. “Those individuals may need to wait in Mexico as CBP officers work to process those already within our facilities.”
Caravan migrants arrive at border in search of US asylum pic.twitter.com/HIfgI0L2uj
— Ruptly (@Ruptly) April 30, 2018
Despite the news that the crossing was full NPR’s Carrie Khan reports that members of the caravan were not immediately deterred — still forming lines and hoping to march toward the crossing.
If migrants approach the crossing and are turned away they would have to stay in Mexico — a decision that others had already made.
The migrants are facing an uncertain future wherever they land. Many have decided not to seek to asylum in the U.S. after speaking with volunteer immigration lawyers, who have advised the migrants to be prepared for separation.

The weeks-long trek by this so-called caravan is an annual, organized trip. Most of the people are from Honduras and are fleeing the violence that erupted after the highly contested presidential elections in November. Many people are also from Guatemala and El Salvador, where gang violence is prolific.
This year’s journey, however has been the target of harsh political rhetoric and ire from President Trump. He points to the group of migrants as justification for increased security, namely a border wall.
The so-called Migrant Caravan continues it's stand-off with the US govt here at the US border terminal in Tijuana. Unclear how long the migrants will camp out here. Conditions are tough especially for the children – more now on @GMA pic.twitter.com/fRAnpgUQbf
— Matt Gutman (@mattgutmanABC) April 30, 2018
Trump has also called on the Mexican government to stop the caravan before it reaches the border. The demands come amid increased tension between the two countries as they seek to hammer out a revised North American Free Trade Agreement. Trump has gone as far as to threaten NAFTA, calling it Mexico’s “cash cow,” if the country did not act to slow traveling migrants.
A number of migrants seeking asylum Sunday decided to change course along their journey, so much so that it momentarily stalled the trip. Central Americans face an uphill battle when seeking asylum in the U.S. NPR’s Eyder Peralta reports that in 2010, 9 out of 10 Hondurans and Salvadorans are denied asylum, as well as 8 out of 10 Guatemalans.
The Department of Homeland’s Security says it is monitoring the situation, and encourages the migrants to seek shelter from violence in the first safe country they encounter, including Mexico. In a statement, Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen said:
“If members of the ‘caravan’ enter the country illegally, they will be referred for prosecution for illegal entry in accordance with existing law. For those seeking asylum, all individuals may be detained while their claims are adjudicated efficiently and expeditiously, and those found not to have a claim will be promptly removed from the United States.”
Among the people planning to apply for asylum Sunday are many women and children. The U.S. has been reportedly been separating children and families to deter illegal immigration practices.
Migrants seeking asylum in the U.S. are often detained, then released while their asylum claims is processed. This procedure has been dubbed by critics of immigration as “catch and release.”
If members of the caravan are detained and released, some activists across the country are offering a place to stay while the migrants await a decision on their asylum. This includes Grace Aheron, with the network Showing Up For Racial Justice, which is organizing hosts. She shares a house with four other SURJ members in Charlottesville, Va., and they felt compelled to help.
“Many of us have connections to immigration,” Aheron told NPR’s Camila Domonoske. “It felt like the least we could do … to give these people that are coming from such incredibly intense and violent situations a soft place to land in the U.S.”
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