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Seeking asylum in the US? Make sure your cellphone is charged.

Seeking asylum is difficult in the best of times. Now the U.S. has turned to tech to streamline the process.

Since Jan. 12, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has required individuals seeking to enter the U.S. under exemptions to Title 42 – a temporary pandemic-era law that has been used to expel asylum-seekers and migrants over the past three years – to use their new CBP One mobile application.

Why We Wrote This

Seeking asylum is one of the most fraught moments in an individual’s life. Now the U.S. requires asylum-seekers to begin the process with a phone application that could exacerbate inequalities.

Many critics say that the app, which will persist after Title 42 ends this week, is widening the digital divide. It demands asylum-seekers have access to a smartphone, internet or phone credit, literacy, and basic technological knowhow. 

Advocates have tried to impart new skills to migrants and refugees in shelters across the U.S.-Mexico border. Their assistance can be as basic as taking a photo of the person trying to register on the app and uploading it. Others need translation help – CBP One is only available in English, Spanish, and Haitian Creole.

The simplicity of some of the questions and roadblocks underscores just how complicated relying on a digital app for such an at-risk and transient population can be. “It’s supposed to protect the most vulnerable, but for many it’s inaccessible,” says Lindsay Toczylowski, executive director of the Immigrant Defenders Law Center. 

The day has just begun in the historic center of Ciudad Juárez, at Mexico’s northern border. Among the food vendors and border-bridge traffic, pedestrians are angling their cell phones outward, then upward, then back down again. Some snap selfies; others grumble about their faulty connection.

But this is not merely a slice of life in 2023 – a society glued to its digital devices. These are migrants attempting to take the first step, as they do every day at 9 a.m. sharp, to claim humanitarian protection in the United States.

Welcome to America’s latest tech initiative: asylum via app.

Why We Wrote This

Seeking asylum is one of the most fraught moments in an individual’s life. Now the U.S. requires asylum-seekers to begin the process with a phone application that could exacerbate inequalities.

Since Jan. 12, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has required individuals seeking to enter the U.S. under exemptions to Title 42 – a temporary pandemic-era law that has been used to expel asylum-seekers and migrants over the past three years – to use the new CBP One mobile application.

The app accepts appointments from Mexico for just several minutes each morning, and while the fortunate have scored spots with it quickly, it has put others at the whim of tech, its glitches and all. Widening the digital divide, the app demands asylum-seekers have access to a smartphone, internet or phone credit, literacy, and basic technological know-how. Critics say that doesn’t jibe with the reality for many here hoping to gain humanitarian protection in the U.S. And it adds more inequality and arbitrariness into a process that for most users is the most defining step of their lives.

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