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In the downtown area of Mexico City, a man is seen wrapped in a plastic blanket in this undated photo. Josephine Sister María Magdalena Silva Rentería said the lack of attention from government authorities to address the migration crisis is causing hundreds of migrants to live in street conditions and uncertainty. (OSV News photo/Luis Donaldo González, Global Sisters Report)

Speaker: Mexico City is ‘another border,’ government has ‘no will’ to address migration crisis

July 31, 2024
By Luis Donaldo González
OSV News
Filed Under: Immigration and Migration, News, World News

MEXICO CITY (OSV News) — At an international and interdisciplinary conference on migration held July 3-9 in Mexico City, human rights activist Josephine Sister María Magdalena Silva Rentería denounced the government’s lack of interest in addressing the migration crisis.

“Mexico City has become another border,” she told the academics and researchers during the conference’s open plenary session. “Two years ago, the migratory flow went up tremendously. We reported it to the government but they always have otros datos” — other statistics.

Sister María Magdalena’s address was the first response to the panel “Im-mobilities and Human Rights in the Americas,” which opened the Migration Conference 2024 at the Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City. Also participating in the panel were sociologist María Dolores París Pombo from Colegio de la Frontera Norte, Mexican Sen. Emilio Álvarez Icaza and Karla Valenzuela, a professor from Universidad Iberoamericana and one of the conference’s organizers.

For the past 13 years, Sister María Magdalena has worked with civil and faith-based organizations dedicated to assisting migrants passing through Mexico City on their way to the United States.

Josephine Sister María Magdalena Silva Rentería greets fellow panelist María Dolores París Pombo after a panel discussion titled “Im-mobilities and Human Rights in the Americas” at Migration Conference 2024 at the Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City July 3. (OSV News photo/Luis Donaldo González, Global Sisters Report)

“This has allowed me to have a very extensive panorama of life and what is put at risk in these places,” Sister María Magdalena said.

In addition to having coordinated the Red de Documentación de las Organizaciones Defensoras de Migrantes, or REDODEM — a network dedicated to recording the human rights violations that migrants suffer daily — Sister María Magdalena is the founder and director of the House of Welcome, Training and Empowerment for Migrant and Refugee Women and Families, or CAFEMIN.

But despite being the largest shelter in Mexico City, with the capacity to shelter 150 migrants (and at one point having to host 800), “nothing is ever enough,” Sister María Magdalena said.

According to what migrants have shared with CAFEMIN, 90 percent of the women have suffered a rape along the way, while 60 percent have suffered more than two rapes. “They know this and come prepared, physically and biologically, with contraceptives. But the impact on their mental health is horrendous,” she said.

“Before we did not register sexual assaults in males,” she added. But today, “the statistics have almost leveled off” between men and women.

Sister María Magdalena believes that government authorities have no interest in addressing the migratory crisis because, for them, “migrants are nothing. They do not vote.”

According to the Josephine sister, these situations cause hundreds of migrants to live in street conditions and uncertainty in Mexico City.

“When we saw that the shelters were overflowing, we demanded that a place be opened. (The government) opened the Tláhuac shelter, which was a total failure. Not because they don’t have funds,” Sister María Magdalena said. She added that her fellow team offered assistance to Mexico City’s government to run the shelter, but the government rejected it, as it only wanted publicity in the media.

“There is simply no will,” she said.

During her 20-minute address, Sister María Magdalena highlighted the National Migration Institute’s mismanagement. “They are dedicating themselves to beating and persecuting migrants,” she said. “What they are doing is detaining — in the best of cases — detaining and deporting. At worst — and what we have witnessed — is handing them over to organized crime.”

“I say this because we have documented cases,” Silva Rentería said, adding that they at CAFEMIN manage to rescue about two for every 100 cases. “Organized crime, by organizing, is the one who wins.”

Four months ago, the sisters had to close CAFEMIN “because organized crime began to cobrarnos piso (to extort money from us),” Sister María Magdalena told Global Sisters Report, adding that they are “gradually working to reopen our shelter.”

According to sociologist and fellow panelist París Pombo, different actors abuse migrants nationwide. “There are widespread cases of extortion,” she said. “Overlapping forms of violence are kidnapping and human trafficking, immigration detention and exploitation.”

París Pombo also pointed to the tragic death of 40 migrants in a National Migration Institute detention center in March 2023. “Many people there had migratory documents but had not paid the extortion.”

For his part, Álvarez Icaza remarked that Mexico is going through one of its worst migration management periods. The resources of the Mexican Agency for International Development Cooperation, or AMEXCID, were used to fix the facilities used to detain Central American migrants, he said. “AMEXID has been financing illegal prisons.”

Sister María Magdalena pointed out that under President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s current government, the Mexican Commission for Refugee Aid has been tremendously diminished. “They have no human or economic resources to assist migrants.”

“I don’t have many expectations,” Sister María Magdalena said of Claudia Sheinbaum, Mexico’s president-elect and of whoever will be the incoming U.S. president in November. “Hopefully, they will surprise us.”

In 2019, the Mexico City Human Rights Commission awarded Sister María Magdalena for her work with migrants and refugees.

“Some people ask me if I am afraid to be advocating, listening and touching this reality in the shelters,” Sister María Magdalena said. “No, I am not afraid. I continue because I am a woman of hope.”

“As Pope Francis says, in migrants we touch the flesh of Christ,” she concluded.

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Luis Donaldo González

Luis Donaldo González is writing for the Global Sisters Report from the U.S.-Mexico border.

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