Sister Maria Tello Claro, the director of Casa del Migrante, defined that the temper at her shelter has turned to unhappiness and anguish since Trump’s inauguration.
The shelter, designed to accommodate 170 individuals, presently homes 190 migrants primarily from Honduras, Venezuela, El Salvador and Haiti.
Tello noticed that most of the residents, together with Martino and Alvarado, had been held hostage in some unspecified time in the future throughout their journeys to the border.
“Right here it’s harmful as a result of they are often kidnapped. The truth is, they’re being kidnapped,” Tello stated.
However Tello defined that the migrants and asylum seekers she is aware of have few choices. “The place are they going to go? A few of them can not return to their nations.”
She added that the US’s 90-day pause on international support spending has additionally restricted the shelter’s capability to handle the wants of migrants and asylum seekers.
Different nongovernmental organisations supply help to Casa del Migrante, however their budgets have dried up within the wake of the help freeze. Casa del Migrante has already misplaced certainly one of its two volunteer counselling psychologists because of this.
Tello defined that she and her colleagues have had a number of conferences with different shelters to debate how you can present help, however they’re not sure what to do.
“We go daily,” Tello stated.
Johanna Ovando, 31, is among the many asylum seekers stranded on the border. She fled El Salvador along with her husband, two youngsters and mom.
She feared her nation’s gangs would prey on her eldest son now that he has turned 10, a first-rate age for recruitment.
El Salvador’s authorities has responded to gang violence by imposing an iron-fisted safety crackdown, leading to widespread human rights abuses. That solely heightened the dangers of staying.
However now that Ovando and her household are caught on the US-Mexico border, she wonders if she made the appropriate resolution. In Mexico, she stated, her household has confronted discrimination, abuse and extortion.
“There may be intercourse trafficking, and one walks with the worry of persecution,” Ovando stated. Evaluating the scenario to El Salvador, she added, “It’s the similar over there, however it’s our nation.”
Ovando plans to remain another month at a shelter in Matamoros. If the asylum course of doesn’t resume, she and her household will depart.
“We can not keep right here,” Ovando stated. “It’s very insecure.”

For Martino, nevertheless, returning shouldn’t be an possibility. He feels that going again in any case he survived would imply defeat.
“Persistence runs out, hope ends and lots of issues have to be taken under consideration,” Martino stated. “However calmly, with endurance and loads of religion, we put all the things in God’s fingers.”
However he acknowledged his destiny can also be within the US president’s fingers, and he’s hoping for some indication of what his future holds: “Donald Trump additionally has to offer solutions.”