
Tecate, Mexico – Mexican shelters, usually the last stop for northbound migrants, are filling with southbound deportees.
Fewer migrants are crossing in the wind-swept deserts along an increasingly fortified border. Far to the north, fields are empty at harvest time as workplace raids become more common.
Mexicans are increasingly giving up on the American dream and staying home, and the federal crackdown on undocumented workers announced Friday could discourage even potential migrants from taking the risks as the United States tries to purge some of its illegal population.
U.S. border agents detained 55,545 illegal immigrants jumping over border walls, walking through the desert and swimming across the Rio Grande between October and June. That’s down 38 percent for the entire border compared with the same period a year before.
U.S. and Mexican officials say increased border security, including 6,000 National Guard troops, remote surveillance technology and drone planes, have thwarted smugglers who had succeeded for years at beating the system.
Immigrants also say they feel Americans are increasingly hostile toward them.
“It’s the discrimination,” said George Guevara, 28, who was deported to Tijuana last month after living in the U.S. for 18 years. “It’s making people step back. It’s just too much of a risk. It’s better to be out here.”
Guevara, who has only distant memories of Mexico, was living at a Tijuana migrant shelter filled with deportees, many of whom are Mexican-born but find themselves in a country that is foreign to them.
“I barely remember living here,” Guevara said. “But I see this as an opportunity. I’m going to go back to Guadalajara to see my family and forget what happened.”
The biggest drop in Border Patrol detentions – a 68 percent decrease – was in the remote, heat-seared desert surrounding Yuma, Ariz., once popular with smugglers. Border Patrol spokesman Jeremy Chappell credits the additional troops and tougher security.
“Where an alien before was able to sneak across, now he has the National Guard watching him,” Chappell said.



