[Ray Bogan]
The number of immigrants from overseas who tried to illegally enter the United States increased two to three times over the last couple of years. The trend covers not just the US southern border, but entry points around the country.
In October 2021, Border Patrol officials encountered 15,076 people from China, India, Ukraine, Russia, Turkey, Burma, the Philippines and Romania trying to enter the U-S illegally. In October 2023, there were 32,332. That includes entries through the southern and northern borders and everywhere else in between including plane and boat travel.
But when adding data from what CBP calls other countries, which includes many middle eastern and African nations, it’s three times higher. There were 21,664 encounters in October 2021, 61,987 in October 2023.
The data can be broken down even further to show the increase in immigrants who are literally crossing oceans to enter the US through the southern border. In October 2021 it was 5,583, in October 2023 – 31,185. These increases can be seen throughout the year.
Why is this? Social media has played a factor. Immigrants are taking videos of their journey and posting them on tiktok to be seen by their friends back home and shared around the world.
TikTok user Carlos Nunez posted a video of himself in the Darien Gap, one of the most dangerous parts of the journey north, which now has 400,000 views. He posted that video in October. Last week, he posted a video from New York’s Times Square titled in Spanish – dreams do come true.
Reporting from the Washington Post reveals that CBP is finding men from China, India, and Turkey crossing in Southern California, and families from Mexico, Central America and men from Africa crossing in the Arizona desert. CBP officials say those demographic patterns are telltale signs of smuggler directed operations.
In Washington, the Senate and Biden Administration are trying to reach an agreement on asylum and parole reforms that would be included in a bill to provide aid to Ukraine, Israel and the Indo-Pacific Region. But Congress has gone home for the holidays, so the earliest a deal can get done now is the first or second week of January.