‘Every day it’s more barriers’: how the US is shutting out climate refugees
Evelyn was a teenager when Hurricane Mitch hit Honduras in 1998. ‘Every day it’s more barriers,’ she said. She now lives in New York and has two daughters. Photograph: Thalia Juarez/The Guardian View image in fullscreen Evelyn was a teenager when Hurricane Mitch hit Honduras in 1998. ‘Every day it’s more barriers,’ she said. She now lives in New York and has two daughters. Photograph: Thalia Juarez/The Guardian ‘Every day it’s more barriers’: how the US is shutting out climate refugees As the US shuts its doors to most refugees, there’s little hope of a new system to help those forced from home , storms and heatwaves worsened . Those forced to flee their home countries, however, are finding that the door to the US is more firmly shut than ever. Neither US nor international law recognizes environmental hazards, such as climate-related displacement, as a valid cause to claim asylum or gain entry through other migration pathways, despite the mounting toll of disasters caused . But those who have managed to get to the US through other means after being displaced in this way now find themselves in an even more precarious position following Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown, with little hope of a new system to help others forced from their homes . For some, that pathway to the US has been particularly perilous. When Hurricane Mitch crashed into Honduras, killing 7,000 people, one affected family surveyed the unsalvageable ruins of their home and realized they had a lifeline – to move to the US. View image in fullscreen Residents of Tegucigalpa, Honduras, look at homes destroyed by a mudslide triggered , on . Photograph: Yuri Cortéz/AFP/Getty ImagesEvelyn, who does not want to share her full name, was a teenager when Mitch hit in 1998 and recalled how her relatives in New York City pleaded with her mother to bring her and her sister to the US. “There were bodies and dead animals floating in the water, the house was messed up, the furniture was all gone – doors, windows gone. It was so, so sad,” said Evelyn. “I got sick because of the mosquitoes and didn’t have any services to rebuild the house because our country is very poor. My uncle and aunt were just like, ‘OK, just bring the kids over here, don’t stay. It’s dangerous.’” Storms of the deadly ferocity of Mitch are even more likely now because of a hotter atmosphere and ocean that has rapidly heated up from the burning of fossil fuels.
Original story by Guardian Africa • View original source
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