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The Door Back to Mexico

The Â鶹Éç’s Valeria Perasso is on the US border, exploring the journey taken by Mexican deportees as they pass through the security fence, back home to Mexico.

The Â鶹Éç’s Valeria Perasso is on the US border, exploring the journey that Mexican deportees take as they pass through a set of metal doors in the security fence at San Ysidro, California back to their home country.

Prior to their removal from America, there is usually a period of temporary detention and Valeria has obtained access inside the Otay detention Centre. As the deportees are led through the doors, which are opened several times a day by officials, they consider their past lives in terms of what they are leaving behind and their future, which is uncertain.

In the year that President Obama prioritises comprehensive immigration reform and as the number of deportations under his presidency reaches record levels, Assignment discovers the changing profile of a typical deportee – those who may have lived in the US for decades and are determined to keep trying to cross back. This programme is part of the Freedom2014 season and follows people who have been living in the shadows as undocumented immigrants in the US and joins them on their reluctant return to Mexico and a freedom they often do not want.

Producer: Nina Robinson

Picture: The back of a metal door, in Mexico, Credit: Â鶹Éç

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25 minutes

Last on

Thu 20 Mar 2014 20:06GMT

The US/Mexico border fence

The US/Mexico border fence

A rusty door in the border fence at San Ysidro in California is one of the main deportation points for Mexicans.   Deportees are brought to this door from all over the US and it is a short walk from here, back to their home country.  The Mexican flag flies on the other side of the fence.  The door is opened several times a day by immigration officials, between the hours of 6am and midnight.

Deportees at the US/Mexico border

Deportees at the US/Mexico border

Mexicans are brought to the doors in the border fence, ready to be deported from the United States.  Many may have been deported before.  Figures from 2010 show that 56 per cent of apprehensions on the border were people who had been caught previously. 

Broadcasts

  • Thu 20 Mar 2014 00:32GMT
  • Thu 20 Mar 2014 04:32GMT
  • Thu 20 Mar 2014 09:06GMT
  • Thu 20 Mar 2014 15:32GMT
  • Thu 20 Mar 2014 20:06GMT

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