Chinese migrants trying to communicate with border patrol |
Reaching the United States has always been the goal of many Chinese and after China lifted all Covid-19 restrictions, its residents are fleeing by the droves.
The constant lockdowns during the pandemic caused them to think of their escape plans, with many looking for ways to get out.
While the uber rich have their consultants to help them move their money out and themselves, it's the middle class folks who also want to make a go of it in the US.
Some are doing it the official way by applying for a visa to the US Consulate in their respective cities, while others have found another, more arduous way to get into America.
Several media reports including this Reuters report has found that these Chinese people buy a ticket to Ecuador -- because they can enter visa-free -- and from there pay smugglers up to US$50,000 to get them across to Fronton, Texas, the US-Mexico border city.
Through doing their research online, these migrants discover they cannot bring any belongings with them, only the basic necessities -- many bring battery power packs -- and footwear like Crocs and hiking boots.
How many are making the trek?
In the six months since October 22, there have been 6,500 Chinese apprehended by border patrol, the highest on record, a more than 15-fold increase from a year ago, according to US Customs and Border Protection data.
Once these migrants get to the border at Fronton, they are instructed to find the cemetery where the border patrol is based. Many of them seek asylum because they fear persecution at home for example on religious grounds. Asylum seekers from China won in US immigration court 58 percent of the time. If they are successful, then they can apply for work permits and then start working legally in 180 days. It is not clear what happens to the other 42 percent who don't get asylum.
The migrants are mostly men, some with young families |
No matter how much the Chinese government is promoting its economy as booming post-Covid, its people are leaving the country.
China may have the second biggest economy in the world, but other nationalities are not trying to smuggle themselves into the Middle Kingdom...
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