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Reveal

Did the US Cause Its Own Border Crisis?

Reveal

The Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX

News

4.78K Ratings

🗓️ 28 September 2024

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The right to asylum has been enshrined in US law since the 1950s. It’s meant to provide a safe haven for people fleeing violence and government persecution. 

Laura Ascencio Bautista and her family have faced both in Mexico, where her brother Benjamin disappeared along with 42 others in 2014 after police stormed a bus from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers’ College.

In the years since, violence in her home state of Guerrero left Bautista desperate. She heard asylum was created for people like her. So she traveled north, headed for the perceived safety of the United States.

“I was told that if I went to the US border and told my family’s story and how it’s not safe back home, the United States could protect me,” she said.

Despite all the political hand-wringing about a crisis at the border, many Americans don’t understand what’s driving so many people from Mexico and other countries to come to the US in the first place. This week, Reveal senior reporter and producer Anayansi Diaz-Cortes takes us to a part of Mexico that many families are leaving behind—a place where fear is a part of daily life—and unwinds US policies that helped trigger the cycle of violence and migration that continues to this day. 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

For over 75 years, Americans United for separation of church and state has tirelessly

0:06.4

defended your right to live as yourself and belief as you choose.

0:11.2

From protecting LGBTQIA plus rights and marriage equality to safeguarding reproductive

0:17.8

freedom church state separation is at the heart of our most vital freedoms.

0:23.2

Americans United fight for every individual's freedoms

0:26.8

to believe as they choose, so long as they don't harm others.

0:31.2

Join the fight today at AU.org

0:34.4

slash MJ.

0:37.8

From the Center for Investigative Reporting in PRX,

0:40.8

this is reveal.

0:42.4

I'm Al Lettson.

0:44.0

It's October 2020 and reveals Aniancey Diaz Cortez is driving up into the mountains of southern Mexico.

0:54.0

We've been driving for eight hours now.

0:58.0

She arrives at a house in a tiny sleepy village so high up in the Sierra.

1:07.0

It feels like she's floating in the sky.

1:15.0

She's here to meet the Bautista family.

1:18.4

She's welcome with the smell of fresh salsa,

1:20.9

flowers, and friendly faces.

1:25.0

Two young women are chatting in front of a glorious view of deep green mountain peaks, but Aniazzi can't tell if they're related.

1:35.0

We always get that question because we look nothing alike says one of the women may runi

1:44.6

physically not not us parsemos

1:48.3

we're sisters says louder we may not look the same

...

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