The surge of migrants entering the United States across the southern border increasingly includes people from a surprising place: China.
Despite the distances involved and the difficulties of the journey, more than 24,000 Chinese citizens have been apprehended crossing into the United States from Mexico in the past year. That is more than in the preceding 10 years combined, according to government data.
They typically fly into Ecuador, where they do not need a visa. Then, like hundreds of thousands of other migrants from Central and South America and more distant locations, they pay smugglers to guide their travel through the dangerous jungle between Colombia and Panama en route to the United States. Once there, they turn themselves in to border officials and many seek asylum.
And most succeed, in turn fueling further attempts. Chinese citizens are more successful than people from other countries with their asylum claims in immigration court. And those who are not end up staying anyway because China usually will not take them back.
[…]
The migrants are part of an exodus of citizens who have grown frustrated with harsh restrictions related to the coronavirus pandemic and the direction of Xi Jinping’s authoritarian government. The trend has been coined the “run philosophy,” with citizens escaping to Japan, Europe and the United States.
That’s a long walk…
https://youtu.be/aswvkdCpZYc?si=Sm-fLOeZQKbCJsgY
They fly to Ecuador where they don’t need a visa to enter, then pay for smugglers to get them in.
Yes, and the smugglers get them in by making them walk through the parts that don’t have roads. Which are very long.
You think people are willing to migrate that far now? Wait until the Himalayan ice caps are gone.
Alexa, play A Thousand Miles by Vanessa Carlton