Pregnant migrant goes into labor during border standoff

A pregnant woman went into labor at the Texas border as heavily armed National Guard troops faced off with tens of thousands of desperate migrants forced to wait longer than expected to flood into the US.

The mom-to-be was among huge crowds — including young kids — gathered on the banks of the Rio Grande in El Paso, Texas, where armored vehicles and endless stretches of barbed wire also kept them from attempting to cross from Mexico, with many destined for New York.

They were expecting to be allowed in first thing Wednesday at the lifting of Title 42 restrictions — until an unexpected, last-minute order was issued to temporarily keep it in place.

The unidentified pregnant migrant went into labor on the riverbank, where Border Patrol agents rushed to help, according to First Sgt. Suzanne Ringle, a spokesperson for the National Guard forces on patrol there. It was not immediately clear what happened to the woman and her baby.

Migrants were seen gathered together after they were blocked from crossing the U.S.-Mexico Border.
James Keivom
Migrants spent a day waiting at the U.S.-Mexico border before the entry gate opened.
Migrants spent a day waiting at the U.S.-Mexico border before the entry gate opened.

Migrants gather after they were blocked crossing the U.S.-Mexico Border at the Rio Grande River.
El Paso declared a state of emergency as it warned an estimated 20,000 migrants were planning to enter the US from Ciudad Juárez.


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Migrants gather after they were blocked crossing the U.S.-Mexico Border at the Rio Grande River.
They were expecting to be allowed into the country at the lifting of Title 42 restrictions until a last-minute order to temporarily keep it in place.


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Migrants cross the U.S.-Mexico Border at the Rio Grande River from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.
Migrants were seen crossing the U.S.-Mexico Border at the Rio Grande River from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.
James Keivom

Meanwhile, El Paso declared a state of emergency over the weekend as it warned an estimated 20,000 migrants were planning to enter the US from Ciudad Juárez, where shelters are packed to capacity and food banks close to running out.

At one point late Tuesday, some migrants were allowed to enter through a gate — sending hundreds of people scrambling along the concrete banks of the Rio Grande, leaving smoldering campfires behind.

Troops in camouflage uniforms and helmets and armed with rifles stood watching the large gatherings, with armored vehicles lining the river, using a loudspeaker to announce in Spanish that it’s illegal to cross.

Texas said it was sending 400 National Guard personnel, with the Democratic mayor claiming it was to protect vulnerable migrants — while the Guard itself said it was to “repel and turn back illegal immigrants.”

A line of armored vehicles also waited at the ready on the banks of the Rio Grande in El Paso, Texas.
A line of armored vehicles also waited at the ready on the banks of the Rio Grande in El Paso, Texas.

Heavily armed National Guards were on patrol to “repel and turn-back illegal immigrants.”
Heavily armed National Guard troops were on patrol to “repel and turn back illegal immigrants.”


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Heavily armed National Guards were on patrol to “repel and turn-back illegal immigrants.”
Some migrants crawled under barbed wire fencing as armed troops watched.
AFP via Getty Images

There were similar scenes in California, where layered, razor-topped walls rising 30 feet along the border in San Diego kept back an estimated 5,000 migrants waiting to cross from Tijuana.

Title 42 was a public health order aimed at preventing the spread of COVID-19 — one used to expel asylum seekers 2.5 million times, close to half the record 4 million encountered at the Mexican border.

The White House said there was no longer justification to “extend indefinitely a public-health measure” — while conceding that ending the restrictions will likely lead to “disruption and a temporary increase in unlawful border crossings.”

Children at the border.
Many of those kept out vowed not to give up easily.

Children at the border.
They were prevented by long lines of barbed wire fencing.


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Children at the border.
Some kids were still taken across the Rio Grande even as armed troops watched on.


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Children at the border.
Children were among the masses waiting to cross into the US.
ALLISON DINNER/EPA-EFE/Shutterst
Children at the border.
Kids were given piggyback rides ahead of the expected mass flood across the border.
AP

It was set to end Wednesday, but in a last-minute move Monday, the Supreme Court allowed it to remain in place temporarily while a legal challenge by Republican state attorneys general seeking to extend the measures is decided.

President Biden’s administration asked the court to let the asylum restrictions end — but not until after Dec. 27, after the holiday.

Some of the tens of thousands of immigrants who flocked to the border towns complained that they’d been tricked.

Masses of migrants waiting at the US border with Mexico.
Masses of migrants waiting at the border in El Paso, Texas.

Masses of migrants waiting at the US border with Mexico.
Many made campfires to keep warm during the longer-than-expected wait at the border.


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Masses of migrants waiting at the US border with Mexico.
The lines formed at the edge of barbed wire put up by National Guards.

National Guards used loudspeakers to tell migrants in Spanish that it was illegal to cross.
National Guards used loudspeakers to tell migrants in Spanish that it was illegal to cross.


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“I view it as a joke, to give us hope and then, like a child, trick us and tell us that they are going to postpone,” Venezuelan Vladimir Castellanos said as he and his brother waited to cross the Rio Grande.

Another Venezuelan, Alexis Farfan, 26, said he was waiting to get back after being expelled from the US earlier this month. 

“I can’t give up so easily … I trust in God that I will get to the other side,” he said.

With Post wires

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