The Forum Daily | Monday, October 23, 2023
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THE FORUM DAILY
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Amid an unprecedented volume of migrants journeying toward the United
States, Costa Rica and Panama announced that thousands will be bused
from the Darién Gap north to the Costa Rica-Nicaragua border, report
Megan Janetsky and Javier Córdoba of the Associated Press
.
****
Buses are taking between 1,500 and 2,000 people a day to migrant camps
along this border. This move is the latest in a long list of attempts by
Central American governments to stem the tide of migration and lessen
the burden on their own resources.
One Venezuelan migrant, a mother named Andelys who traveled with her
young daughter, said that she hoped to rest after trekking through the
jungle for days. However, conditions in the camp were bad enough that
she wanted to leave as soon as possible.
****
Meanwhile, yesterday Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador
hosted officials from Latin American and Caribbean countries - but not
the United States - to discuss regional migration, Syra Ortiz Blanes
and Jacqueline Charles report in the Miami Herald
.
The summit's goal, per Mexican Foreign Minister Alicia Barcena, is a
regional approach "to discourage migration via economic programs,
address Washington's sanctions on Venezuela and Cuba and discuss
'labor mobility pathways' to the United States," reports Sofia
Miselem of AFP
.
Mark your calendars: On Nov. 3, President Biden plans to host a
different group of leaders (with some overlap) at an Americas Summit,
Margaret Brennan and Ed O'Keefe of CBS News
report.
Welcome to Monday's edition of The Forum Daily. I'm Dan Gordon, the
Forum's strategic communications VP, and the great Forum Daily team
also includes Jillian Clark, Clara Villatoro and Katie Lutz. If you have
a story to share from your own community, please send it to me at
[email protected] .
**BILL SUPPORT -**With support from advocates and in the business and
faith communities, more than three dozen organizations nationwide have
signed on to a campaign to push the bipartisan Asylum Seekers Work
Authorization Act, reports Kelley Bouchard of the Portland Press Herald
.
Versions of the bill in the House and Senate would reduce asylum
seekers' wait times for work permits from six months to 30 days, as
the Forum has noted
.
****
**SETTLEMENT** - A group of immigrant detainees have reached a
settlement in their lawsuit that claimed Georgia's largest ICE
detention center broke federal anti-slavery laws, reports Lautaro
Grinspan of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
.
Plaintiffs said they were forced to work in the facility or face severe
punishments. The settlement includes confidential benefits to individual
plaintiffs and requires detention center operator CoreCivic to give
detainees an outline of their rights if they choose to take part in the
Voluntary Work Program.
**MIRROR** - The Dominican Republic's approach to its border with
Haiti and treatment of Haitians have multiple parallels to the United
States, Lorgia GarcÃa Peña, a writer, activist and scholar, argues in
an op-ed for The New York Times
.
Haiti is currently experiencing gang violence and the effects of a
barely functioning government. GarcÃa Peña contends that
****"the Dominican Republic and the rest of the international community,
particularly the United States, must take effective and compassionate
measures that can support Haitians."
**NEW LIFE** - Amaury Pacheco was a poet and freedom fighter in Cuba
before his detention and escape to the United States. Now living in
Miami with humanitarian parole, he's trying to build a new life here,
reports Daniel Rivero of WUSF
.
Pacheco gained legal status in the United States through a humanitarian
parole program created by the Biden administration last October. Pacheco
reunited with his wife and five of their six children, he hopes to
receive his work permit soon and resume his life in the art world.
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Thanks for reading,
Dan
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